gratitude-a-thon day 191: bill clinton’s superpower

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Hey, this is a great article. It’s about the secret behind Bill Clinton’s success.  It’s well worth a read.

I can comment on number two. I was pregnant with Jake. We’d just arrived at the Vineyard. Peter and I were waiting for my cousins to arrive, so we went down to the beach to wait. There were just a couple people on the beach. We got up to take a walk, but it was short, because the winter had churned up too many rocks and my pregnant bare feet couldn’t deal. So, we turned around and all the people on the beach were in the parking lot (just behind the beach). “What’s going on?” we asked someone. “President Clinton just came through to visit a friend.” There are all sorts of funny little roads on the Vineyard, and this one went through the parking lot. Peter and I were big Bill fans and I was particularly upset to have missed this event. So, I sat my big ass and belly in that parking lot to wait for Bill and his entourage to come back through the parking lot. It was fun and actually became somewhat of a party. Word spread somehow and before we knew it, the parking lot was full of people coming from all over the place to catch a glimpse of the pre-scandal prez. We were checked out by secret service guys in short sleeved shirts, and sandals with socks. It was actually hours, but finally, Bill came down the dirt road and stopped smack in the parking lot to greet us. I got my chance to shake his hand and somehow felt it important to tell him that I had surgery the night of his primary win that allowed me to get pregnant. He gave me a big smile and looked at me with such sincerity, I felt like I was the absolute only person in the world. He really did have that magic. It was real.  My husband felt it too. We had been touched (turns out a little later an intern named Monica had been, too).

We might not all be able to develop that kind of focus on someone else, but we can all listen better. I for one, always try to (that is, when I can stop talking).

 

gratitude-a-thon day 190: small bites friday

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And it’s another edition of Small Bites Friday. Yum!

Yesterday, my friend Ron set up my new G4, which has been in the box in the corner of my office, since January. Wowza, this thing is billboard-sized awesome. Thanks, Ron. You are my man.

Sanjay Gupta changes his mind about weed. Hey, maybe he’s high.

You have to give it up to Robert and Doris Moody who have been married for 73 years. They eat one of my all time, highest ranked foods, pancakes everyday. And they’re 95 and 94. I’m getting out the Bisquick right now.

You can’t win if you don’t play, and I didn’t play or win, but this dude did. Congrats, man. Hope you have a blast spending it.

Learning something new is good for us. Cheese making, anyone?

I love when Target does a collaboration. This Phillip Lim looks like a good one. Here’s to affordable design for the masses, baby!

It’s not just another birthday, it’s another opportunity to eat more chocolate.

Another reason, the world should be going to the dogs. Loyalty. Gosh, I love them.

gratitude-a-thon day 189: you don’t have to be young to be fabulous

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I like the idea of breaking new ground as you get older. So, you can imagine how  much I loved this article entitled Nine Women Who Succeeded Later in Life. 

The baby boomers are doing everything longer and better than ever before. Why not think you can reinvent yourself at any age? What’s really to stop us, but fear (which is certainly a big red light, isn’t it though). I read a great quote yesterday, “The obstacle is the path.” That stopped me in my tracks. For like a whole five minutes, which for me, whose mind generally travels at the speed of sound from one thought to another, was like a decade in dog years. Every time you fail, it’s not a mistake, it’s part of your path. OHHHHHHH. I get it. Profound.

Gratitude to these ladies. And to anyone who isn’t 35 and embarks on something new. I say yes. I will try and follow in your footsteps.

gratitude-a-thon day 188: the swing

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I’m always looking for reasons to get my gratitude on. Today it’s something from a big long time ago.

We had a couple of apple trees in our backyard when I was growing up. They sort of made an umbrella of shade on a fairly large expanse. I had a red seated, chipped paint swing on a rusty chain under there. I used it a lot. It made me feel free and sort of like I was flying, which was one of my childhood ambitions. There was a branch that I used to try and touch with my toes. It forced me to pump harder and stretch my legs beyond their size. I could swing for a long time before I got tired of it. Sometimes it was the place I went when my dad was yelling.

For some reason, swings make me dizzy now, but back then, my backyard swing made me feel like I could reach the sun, and every single one of the planets.

gratitude-a-thon day 186: a perfect summer weekend

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Sky was still dark from storm, but there it was, a perfect rainbow.

I have been whiney about my bad vacation weather and my tooth for all of July. My tooth, as of this weekend, when I finished my antibiotics, finally feels bearable, and not a moment too soon. That was SO NOT FUN.

So, I just want to give thanks to my weekend, which took a great big bite outta summer. It was damn well near perfect, in fact.

Peter and Ally went to D.C. to visit Peter’s dad and the cousins, and Jake and I stayed home. My summer assault started on Friday night when I met my friend Luciana at Barcelona Wine Bar for an outdoor drink and dinner, which consisted of food I could eat for the rest of my life everyday and night. It was really fun, because it was A) Spontaneous B)  The light gave everything a beautiful glow, C) Luciana is so darn funny D) I stuffed myself with the most heavenly tomatoes from local Allandale farm, served with creamy herbed ricotta and the most delicious bread, as well as chicken pimiento, which has a bite that will make your lips burn.

The next day, my friend Colleen and I went to Crane’s Beach, which was packed, but perfect, and I ended the day with take-out from Barcelona (because I could not get the tomato and herbed ricotta plate from the night before out of my head and had to have a repeat) and watched a really good movie, The Lifeguard with Jake. Then yesterday, Colleen and I went to Crane’s AGAIN, and stayed until it closed at 8 o’clock, which meant that we stayed right on that beach during a storm. I wish someone could have taken our picture, because we took shelter under our beach chairs and it was pretty funny. After it rained, there was the most amazing rainbow, and then the black sky became totally sun-filled again with big, gorgeous, puffy clouds of all denominations. We ended the day with dinner at Woodman’s. I came home and watched the two hour season finale of The Killing.

A+ summer weekend!

Major gratitude. I am a girl of the beach. It is my church, and I am its disciple. Praise the sea. You saved me again.

gratitude-a-thon day 185: kim simon

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Breast is best, except when it’s not.
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Yes, I bottle fed, after I flunked breastfeeding. Go ahead and judge me.

I had a hard time breastfeeding. Jake didn’t latch on properly and my nipples bled. I even went to a La Leche coach, who lived in the back woods of Easton, to learn how to fix my faulty technique, but it didn’t help.  And to further infuriate matters, when I was in public, I was not comfortable and easy about feeding him. I would sit like a statue, trying to cover my boob, without suffocating my kid.  I couldn’t imagine what all the joyous noise was about when it came to nursing, because nothing about it worked for me that could be described as anything but anxiety provoking and painful. So, at four months, I finally gave in, guilty with all the harm I was going to do to my child by not feeding him from the world’s best source, and stopped nursing. Yep, guilty as charged.

With Ally, who cried for the first six months of her life, I tried again to breastfeed, and while my nipples didn’t bleed this time, and I barely gave a shit who saw my boobs in public anymore, she only liked one of my boobs and not the other. Who knows why? Maybe one side was chocolate milk and the other side was not. But with her crying all the time, that left breast was becoming like a water fountain at a grammar school, in constant use. And frankly, with another kid, who was pretty jealous of this new head of hair who cried all the time, I just gave in at three months and stopped for good, happily ending my breastfeeding career forever. Breastfeeding  not only didn’t work well for me personally, but it impacted my family in a negative way. So, I  made a choice that was better for my whole family and not just good for my baby. While I still have guilt over it, I do think It was the right thing for all of us.

I want to say that if you can breastfeed, it’s clearly the best thing for your newborn. I can understand how it must be wonderful for the women who have the right bodies for it, but not every woman does. And I did not. Breast is best, but not always.

But let me tell you about the guilt that came with my failure as a milk machine. Women are not nice about this issue. For those women, for whom using their breasts as a food source works well, breastfeeding is a cult-y topic. They will shame you into misery. There is no sisterhood here. You’re either in or you’re out. There is judgement all over the place when it comes to this issue. And I allowed it to make me feel like less than a good mom.

Which is why, I give it up today to Kim Simon, who has done both, and wants women to know it’s ok however you choose to feed your baby. Thanks, Kim. Where were you when I was drowning in milk and guilt way back when?

gratitude-a-thon day 185: small bites friday

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It’s good not to have tooth pain. I wouldn’t know, but I imagine it is.

Member the totally charming movie, Little Miss Sunshine. Well, turns out Olive (Abigail Breslin) is all growed up. And wow, she’d win that little dance-off now.

H&M is doing Home. And it’s online. Let’s hear it for some super cheap online shopping.

If you have a daughter, and you both have bodies, read this.

Sometimes a good pedicure is the only answer.

The Way Way Back is great fun. You should see it.

I always love VF’s best dressed list. And here it is for your viewing pleasure.

Just read Labor Day by Joyce Maynard. Beautifully wrought characters. A winning story.