The Day My Butt Met Marty’s Chair

I’ve beaten this horse damn near to death, and I’m not a huge fan of animal cruelty, just, you know, an average appreciator of it, NO I’M NOT, lighten up, I’m kidding…

When I was 22, back in Aught-Six, or 199something, I don’t know, I can’t do math, I had some random jobs in San Francisco, where I lived, and where everyone should live after college when they don’t know what they want to be when they grow up.  Then I decided that what I really wanted to do was work in public radio.  Like, as in, not just “I wanted to…” but that it was my destiny, my dream, my most fervent desire.

Turns out though, that in order for someone with no experience in journalism to get started in a major market in public radio, you have to have one critical element in your portfolio…a trustfund.  I had smarts, but I had no money, and I possibly also lacked a little creativity, and what with San Francisco being the land of, well, lots of things, but also the land many many many 20-something Trustafarians with the earnest desire to be unpaid interns in public radio, I was shit outta luck and there was no way I was going to be working the 60+ hours a week for no pay required to get my foot in the door in public radio.

So I opted for what was behind door #2…I’d always said that I never wanted to turn 40, look in the rear view mirror and regret that I’d never done anything completely random like move somewhere amazing like Montana.  Hence, I got a dog, applied to graduate school, packed my car, and moved to Missoula, Montana.  As far as Plan B’s go, I think I did pretty well.  Missoula, Montana has to be one of the greatest places on earth.  I know there are lots of lovely and thoughtful people who would respectfully disagree, but I’d put it above even San Francisco any day of the week.  And my time there was capital I Important.  There is place in my brain reserved for Missoula and I visit it almost daily.  It’s like a private zen garden, but with mountains and good coffee and my best friend and my dog and rivers.

But I digress…So I got a Master’s degree and I became a teacher, which was, I am reasonably confident, the thing that I was meant to become, professionally speaking.  I never did entirely let go of the public radio fantasy, however.  When I turned down the internship in San Francisco – it was offered to me – well, that was a hard day, a hard week.  I couldn’t figure out how to make it work and I had the distinct feeling that I was letting something important slip through my fingers.

Langston Hughes, when he wrote so famously about what happens to dreams when they are deferred, was speaking of something much more significant than the career arc of an upper middle class white girl.  It’s not that much of a stretch, though, is it, to suppose that even a small dream, deferred, could dry up and get swept away in the wake of a life lived in some other direction?  Or that the dream could harden into a kind of callous, a perpetual irritation that, when rubbed the wrong way or leaned on just so would remind you of that one thing you hadn’t done when maybe you could have…and what if?

Last week, I sat in a chair in the studios of WHYY to record a little essay I wrote.  Not such a big deal in the scheme of things.  And it was a one-off event.  But I put those big headphones on, and scooted the chair, usually reserved for someone I listen to almost daily, closer to the microphone, and looked through the big plate glass window at the engineer and the producer on the other side and let myself feel what it feels like to have a dream come true.  And the thing is…even the little ones, the ones you thought had dried up and been swept away with no regrets,they feel really good when they happen.

This I Believe

Drink this Kool-Aid. I Double Dog Dare You.

  

About a year and a half ago, my friend Lora, who thinks, writes, and even lives the way I often wish my cluttered mind would allow me to, invited me and a few other local women bloggers over to her house for dinner.  She’d postponed her usually Wednesday night gathering of neighborhood women to have us over for spaghetti.

Lora started Wednesday Spaghetti in her neighborhood as a way to live what she believes in, the importance of friends and family gathering regularly to build community in the most natural way – sharing a meal and talking about whatever people talk about when they are comfortable and eating dinner: family, life, schedules, politics, the neighborhood, marriage, relationships, work, the weather, anything.   Every week, she puts on a big pot of water, heats up some sauce, and opens her door to a group of regulars.

She even wrote a mission statement:  Wednesday Spaghetti was formed to increase public awareness of the need for families, caregivers, and peer groups to spend quality time together in an in-home, casual dining setting in order to discuss general life issues, household guidelines and practices, personal habits, issues, and goals, educational habits, issues, and goals, employment habits, issues and goals, family habits, issues, and goals, physical health-related issues, sexual health-related issues, emotional health-related issues, spiritual issues, relationship issues, community events and resources, and other such topics; to support and conduct nonpartisan research, educational and informational activities to increase public awareness of the importance of togetherness, communication, and good nutrition; to provide simple to make, nutritious meals to any family or group in the community, regardless of race, color, creed, sexuality, religious beliefs, ethnicity, economic status, or location at no cost to the family or group.

I fell in love with this idea.  I’m not really sure why.  Well, that’s not entirely true.  There are lots of reasons why, and I’ve come at that topic a few times, but it’s a larger than life issue and I’m OK just letting it be that and not completely picking it apart like I do everything else. 

We try to do Wednesday Spaghetti once a month, not every week, and unlike Lora’s Wednesday Spaghetti, our guest list isn’t just a few neighborhood women, it’s a more extensive crowd of families and friends.   The most we’ve ever had was 103 (we think, with so many kids, it’s hard to get an entirely accurate count), but the average is about 50 or 60 guests.

Here are the two things I hear about Wednesday Spaghetti:

1)  I love Wednesday Spaghetti. 
      So do I.  Probably even more than you do.

2)  I don’t know how you do this.

I say, “It’s not hard” and people look at  me like I have a baby’s arm growing out of my forehead.  But it’s true.  I do lots of things that are hard, I sould know. 

So here’s how.  And I want you to do it.  I realize that I sound a little Jim Jones-y here.  But this is some Kool Aid you want to drink.   I promise you that you can do this, and you won’t be sorry.  Ask anyone who knows me, I am as uptight as they come, and if I can have 103 people come to my house on a Wednesday and eat spaghetti, mediocre spaghetti – at BEST, and not only not stress out about it but love every damn minute of it, you can, too.  

How To Wednesday Spaghetti

1) Don’t clean your house:  Straighten up.  Put stuff in closets.  Close doors.

2)  Keep it simple.  Because I invite a ton of people, I use paper plates and plastic cutlery.  I recycle and try not to think about the environmental sins I’m committing. 

3)  Cheap pasta.  Cheap sauce.  Nobody is there to eat gourmet food. 

4)  Sometimes I put some cookies on a plate.  Sometimes I don’t.  If juiceboxes are on sale at the Acme, I buy some.  Sometimes I put out some bottles of sparkling water.  If we have some beer, I put it in a tub.  Sometimes I make a salad.  The first time I did this, I made sure we had spaghetti, sauce, bread, salad, and a dessert.  Now I made spaghetti and sauce.  I put out a few pitchers of ice water and, like I said, usually some juice for kids.  People bring things.  I don’t ask people to RSVP and tell me what they’re bringing, and if they ask, I tell them that if it doesn’t stress them out to bring something, they should feel free.  Sometimes we have spaghetti, sauce, water, wine, and a million brownies.  Sometimes we have lots of salads, sometimes we have none.  Most important thing:  NOBODY CARES. 

5)  We had 103 people at our house for spaghetti last month.  I have a dining room table that seats 8.  My house is about 2000 square feet.  We have a screened porch and a pretty decent sized yard. The neighbor brought over some some tables and chairs.  People find places to sit.  Don’t worry about it.  Kids don’t sit anyway.

6)  I really didn’t clean my bathrooms yesterday.  I usually at least wipe them down with a Clorox wipe.  Not yesterday.  Didn’t have time.  NOBODY CARES.

7)  I say over and over again, to anyone who will listen, “It’s not a party, it’s just spaghetti.”  And people say, “Well, it sure feels like a party.”  That may be.  But in my head, it’s NOT a party, which means I don’t worry about who’s having a good time, I don’t make sure I’ve greeted everyone, I don’t go out of my way to introduce people I’m not positive haven’t met before, I don’t refill glasses.  People come in, I say hi, I make some introductions because I’m not a barbarian, I point people in the direction of food and then everyone does their thing. 

8)  Sit down.  Eat some spaghetti.  Make the noodles ahead of time, put them in a lightly oiled pan in the oven, set to 200.  Dump them in a big bowl and serve everything all at once when everyone gets there.  Put the sauce in a crock pot.  Let people help.  Don’t fuss. 

9)  You will be surprised by how this small thing, this boiling of water and heating of sauce and setting out of plates changes you.  Your family will start to ask, “When is the next Wednesday Spaghetti?” People will say, “Can I bring our neighbors?”  You will, of course, say yes.  You will feel funny about people’s gratitude towards you for hosting this event, because you feel like they are giving something to you as much as you are doing something for them, even more so.  People will tell you, over and over again, how much they love this, and they’ll have this look on their faces, like, “Isn’t it weird?  I mean?  It’s just spaghetti, but…”    

10)  Drink this Kool-Aid.  It’s delicious. And I double dog dare you.

 

To A Hammer Everything Is A Nail

IF you haven’t had an apple cider donut or a fire in your fireplace or bought a pumpkin or thought about a Halloween costume or slept in socks yet this fall, I am sad for you because you are missing out and I recommend you remedy that pronto.  Unless you live in the tropics in which case, we’ll be in touch in February.  We are excellent houseguests.

IF you haven’t had a flu shot, speaking of February, please get one.  For all of us.  But mostly for the wives, because nothing says, “Oh Hellz to the No” like a husband with the flu.

IF you find that you are thinking quite often in song lyrics, it’s probably time to lighten up and spend more time playing with kids or puppies or eating marshmallows and watching tv.

IF you despair that your kids aren’t going to grow up and be normal, functional members of society, SHHHHH….yes they will.  Love on them.  Talk to them like they’re people, not puppies, or plants, or idiots, and get them real help if they need it.  Don’t forget that they aren’t you.  If they don’t go to Harvard, nobody cares.  Most people don’t go to Harvard.  Or Princeton.  Or Yale.  Most people are fine and don’t give a flying Wallenda where anyone else went to college.

IF you haven’t laughed so hard that your face hurt this week, you are doing it wrong and should call somebody up doublequick who is guaranteed to give you the jollies.

IF you haven’t cleaned out the bottom of your desk drawers, you know, under the folders and stuff?  You should.  I did this morning and oh my goodness the garbage and junk and crap and detrititus and refuse of past years and lives even.  Good riddance.  Sweet liberty.

IF you aren’t paying attention to how hateful our politics have become, you must, because you are otherwise guilty by association.

IF you are paying too careful attention to how hateful our politics have become, you mustn’t because otherwise you will become toxic by association.

IF you get bogged down in the details of your daily life, as my daughter said yesterday, out of the mouths of babes, “Sometimes doing the same thing every day gets, I don’t know SO THE SAME-ISH and not exciting and I don’t look forward to it,” then perhaps you need to try to find something that is a little not the same-ish.

IF you forget that the world is a good place, look around more carefully.  There is evidence everywhere.

IF you think that everybody has it better than you, and, coincidentally, you don’t like most of that “everybody,” chances are the problem isn’t with “everybody.”  You  might just need a better mirror.  I’m not much (snort) of a bible girl, but, you know, it says, “Judge not lest you be judged”, not, “Go ahead and judge because everybody’s a big jerk and you’re better than they are anyway and it’s the fault of the (gays/poor people/rich people/black people/illegal aliens/white people/jerks who live next door/women/alcoholics/bloggers/blondes/people who watch Jersey Shore*) that your life sucks.”  Get off the cross, we could use the wood.

IF you know Wanda Sykes, could you please bring her to my house for spaghetti?

BONUS TRACK

IF you don’t know why this is here, I don’t know what to tell you…

gratutious Werth.

*This doesn’t apply to crazy mean haters in my book, by the way.  Open season on Glenn Beck.