My take on the everyday dilemmas of my NYC modern middle class life. As a mother, wife and worker, i often find myself moving from moment to moment and shifting from housewife to hard core professional to lady who lunches to martha stewart mother and so forth. Sometime it's scary. But most of the time it seems amusing to me, and especially to my friend Pete who set up this blog for me. Thanks Pete.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Bourgeois Dilemma #7: what's for dinner?
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Bourgeois Dilemma #29: my bike trip in tuscany is causing me stress
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Bourgeois Dilemma #44: I am not tournament ready.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Bourgeois Dilemma #17: i think it's appendicitis
The other day when my friend C was late for a 9AM court due to her young son's sore throat (done only under duress, as the 9 AM court is only an hour and it's hard to get much doubles in an hour), I was reminded of a standard issue faced by women all over the world: the sick husband. Now, her son is only a child but she was effective enough at describing the syndrome of the level of moaning and complaining and sensitive treatment required when even a moderate illness takes down a Y chromosome to remind me of this age old dilemma. Aptly described in the vignette "man cold" which was hard to miss a few years ago as it made it's rounds on email and facebook (if you are not represented in one of the 4.5 million views on youtube here you go: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXLHWmjA5IE) I have suffered the collateral damage of the sick spouse many times. In the early days, probably before we were wed, i was sensitive and sweet - given that we live at times in one of those twin studies, I had the validation of being called the "nice wife" when it would freakishly occur that both my sweet husband and his identical twin brother came down the the "flu" at the same time . . . my florence nightengale approach in the early days involved trays with chilled OJ and hot tea, buttered cinnamon toast and fluffed pillows to make him comfortable. My sister-in-law, with a few more years of marital bliss and a baby under her belt, had a more pragmatic approach: seal off the germ infested moaning male member of the household, roll a frozen can of OJ under the door and tell him to come out when he's better. Children force us to become more survival oriented on many levels, but a full time working mother just doesn't have time to be sick or to stay home with sick children, so when the man/dad in her life goes down he must be quarantined. a true friend, my sister-in-law is also a teacher and I have adopted her approach as time has gone on - recently, when the vile stomach flu that started off with an email memo from dutiful school nurse H that had me trotting in to the children's room at 3 am with the special bedside puke bowl made it's way to my spouse, I simply provided a bottle of clorox and a new sponge, then sealed off the room with Saran wrap and tell him to disinfect when he's better and ready to re-join the family.
On occasion men do get truly ill as do we all. Four or so years ago, when my tiniest child was still a baby, we were due to go the the dominican republic for spring break. work was frenzied, so i had asked for the indulgence of staying "until it's done" a day or two before we were due to leave. at about 7:30 PM, just as I was getting into a groove and about to have a conference call with someone in asia, I received a call from home:
Honey, it's me
Who? the grunting hoarse voice on the line is hardly recognizable
Me. I think I might have appendicitis.
What? You were fine this morning, are you sure?
Well, I looked on web MD and it seems like it. I really don't feel well. I am so sorry but I think you need to come home.
Now, a normal person might be happy to get a get out of jail card in order to come home early from the office on a late night, but my sweet husband knows the brute force of "get things done mode" and that getting in the way of that is like trying to swim out of a rip tide, smart man that he is. But, he really didn't sound himself so I capitulated.
OK, I will get in a cab and come right home.
But not without sending the following email to the colleague in asia:
So sorry, but I am not going to be able to have our call at 8:30PM EST, my husband thinks he has appendicitis. Men.
I arrive at home and he's lying on the floor in the front hall attempting to give the 6 month old a bottle while the 5 1/2 year old is working to apply a cold compress to his stomach.
Have you called the Dr?
No, I just looked on line.
Call me an enabler if you like but I dialed the Dr. and handed him the phone. His end of the conversation was a series of "no" and "yes" answers completed with Uh. OK, yes, I guess so. Thanks.
Thank god, his sister lived nearby and was able to accompany him as the ER at 100th and madison isn't really a great outing for the whole family at 9PM. I waited at home and got periodic updates as to how many people in white coats had come in to examine him:
oooiiiiiaaahhhhhhhhouch.
In the aftermath it was determined by the sister's boyfriend that the janitorial staff of the hospital were passing the white coat around with the promise of a good laugh when you go give the guy in cubicle 7 a sharp jab to the guts.
Now the guy did have an appendix that was about to rupture and since this event to place in the aftermath of a certain NY governor having major issues in the wake of a botched appendectomy, it was decided that it was a good investment to send him to the concierge floor of the hospital to recover so as to reduce the chance of infection.
Oddly enough, the notion of the concierge floor has not permeated the maternity ward so in spite of the numerous times I had endured the "beauty of childbirth" in this hospital, I had never seen 11 WEST. I arrived early the next morning to make sure that my sweet husband was going to survive and amid the hubbub of the early morning rabble looking for directions to their dr/clinic/er/sick old auntie the moment I asked for "11 WEST" a hush falls over the crowd and I am whisked over to an express elevator to the 11th floor. Walking across an internal catwalk connecting the grubby old hospital building that houses the ER and maternity ward to the glass atrium containing 11 WEST, I see the back of a familiar blond head in one of the windows. Except it can't be, as this person is clad in a white terry cloth bathrobe reading a newspaper while sitting in a chippendale chair.
I enter the automatic doors and am caressed by cool air and the scent of white lilies. A unformed concierge behind a marble desk greets me and directs me to the room where my sweet husband is recovering. Other than a few emergency pull cords, I might as well be at the four seasons.
Entering the inner sanctum I help myself to a diet coke from the stocked mini bar and rounding the bend see my husband. He is sitting with the sports page and ESPN, a leather room service menu on his table and a bottle of vicodin before him.
the doctor thinks it would be a good idea to stay another night, you know, just to avoid any post surgical complications he murmurs.
I'll bet. Funny, just six months before when I had given birth, there was no stocked mini fridge, no menu, no lilies. Just a first time mother yacking away with the story of how she went in to labor and every detail that came after all the way until that very blissful moment with her little bundle of joy in her arms in my room while I was trying to sleep for a few last interrupted moments while the very capable nurses took care of my tiny infant in the nursery. I bet they don't even allow newborn babies in 11 WEST, they certainly wouldn't want to disturb all those men resting up from their surgeries and watching tv while buzzed on painkillers.
Now in a moment of sensitivity I will say that I am glad the whole thing unfolded as it did as the heli pad at casa de campo looked a little overgrown with weeds and the notion of getting to decent medicine from the domnican republic does send a little shudder down the spine.
but let me say, the next time I come down with a cold i know where to go for a little r&r.
Monday, August 2, 2010
Bourgeois Dilemma #4: if it's August, I must be Allie
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Bourgeois dilemma #38: electricity can be tricky
Most of the time, we turn things on and off without thinking too much about it. of course there's the occasional thunderstorm/hurricane/heat wave induced power plant failure when rural and/or urban dwellers find themselves in search of a flashlight to figure out what the heck is going on. or, if you are lucky, you have an off the grid cabin somewhere where on summer nights you catch fireflies in a jar to light the way after the embers of the fire circle burn down.
on a day-to-day basis, I am pretty hooked on electricity. the laptop and fully charged iphone that are the weapons of my trade are fairly key to survival. the fridge, and of course the tv that provides a comforting quiet half hour or so for some of my dependents: children, sweet husband and at this moment in time, my dear old dad. dear old dad really loves to watch the stock market ticker and manually calculates his net worth daily in spite of years of encouragement to take the even slightly longer view of a month or a quarter. he also loves to watch the history channel and on occasion the travel channel. at this writing, I am on dad duty at a rickety rental house at the beach. the first time the tv screen turned blue instead of tuning in to the mellifluous tones of Samantha brown, we were right on the phone to the landlord. a local fourth grade teacher who looks as if he logged his fair share of mileage following the dead in the 70s and 80s, he didn't seem to have the faintest idea about the cable tv. so I gutted it out with comcast and set up a service call. for three long days, dear old dad went without samantha. naturally, on the appointed day I stood sentry over the phone, living in fear of missing THE CALL that would tell me the service man was on his way. no call. at 5, the end of the 2-5 window, I placed the obligatory call to comcast myself and was told that the serviceman had cancelled since the customer was not home. now I don't need to tell you what ensued. I am sure you've had the same dialog with your local cable provider once or twice yourself. it just so happens that rickety beach rental's driveway is 20 yards from the entrance to the town beach and service call was set for a day that turned out to be a 10 in terms of beach time. I am pretty sure that if i had binoculars, I would have been able to see the slightly pale and flabby comcast man in his uniform down over at the snack bar up the way.
some people might want to take matters as simple as a cable outage into their own hands, but i've been burned by this approach before and so like to stick to the professionals. my sweet husband and i spent the first few years of our married life in a garret of sorts on the upper west side. the apartment's best feature was a terrace comprised of the downstairs neighbor's rooftop. otherwise, it was good for us but there were certain compromises. such as the bedroom, narrow enough that a double bed took up so much space that an arm extended from a lying down position would meet with the wall at about 135 degrees. another quirk of our newlywed nest was the air conditioning limitation in the lease. due to the landlord's probable lack of wiring up to code, it was written that only one air conditioner be run at a time. there were two windows in addition to the door out to the "terrace" and each of these windows had the special big plug nearby, leaving one to draw the logical conclusion that each window could hold an air conditioner and so they did.
I am a pleaser and a perfectionist which means that I am a stickler for things like leases. one air conditioner at a time was decreed by Mr. Mort Elbirt, and so even on the hottest day, in our garret, one air conditioner we did run.
now, there wasn't anything in the lease about an air conditioner and the television running concurrently so on a particularly scorching evening we were cozied up after our three course meal for movie night. the ac was humming and we were pleasantly chilled. tv on andbzzztboom. blackness. no ac. no nothing. we opened the door to the apartment and were met by a pitch black hallway and the sound of some rustling and concern below. my sweet husband, never shy about electronics and other matters that for all his god given intelligence he has no right to take on, went in to the breach and headed down to the basement to look under the hood. there were a few apartments with lights on so he was able to find his way down and was joined there by neighbor Ned who was clad in a silk kimono and not much else. In spite of the large rent we paid, the basement of the building had not been touched since the era of the horse and buggy and was a dirt floored room with a lot of plumbing and wires hanging around. enticingly, in the back corner loomed a large handle with a faded skull and crossbones sticker plastered to the front.
the gravitational pull of this handle was too much for my sweet husband who, in spite of increasingly loud and high pitched protestations from neighbor ned and the fact that he was standing about ankle deep in water that had been sitting there since 1895 (I knew after a brief 6 months of marriage to stay out of it), approached, touched, reared back and then went for the kill and pulled the switch and flapped it back. total blackness and the eerie quiet that comes when 10 or so window unit air conditioners cease humming instantaneously. as we mounted the six flights of stairs from the basement to the garrett, people were in the hallways canvassing about what to do and one of the long standing tenants placed a call to the landlord. Our concern was limited to where we were going to sleep that evening, and thank god a pal was traveling so we hoofed it a few blocks to another apartment with functioning AC and TV leaving neighbor ned and the rest of the crew to swelter in the dark.
The next day, I navigated a rather irate Mr. Elbirt
you have two air conditioners
we do, but we only run them one at a time. there are two ac plugs
don't lie to me
and so forth.
Years later, we had to get a letter of recommendation from Mr. Elbirt to purchase a co-op and learned that he had died of a heart attack. presumably, the stress of managing law breaking tenants did him in.
There are a few of these types of incidents in our collective history as a family - garbage disposals, alarm systems and the like falling by the wayside with well meaning attempts to fix/stop/etc. But I've got comacast in the crosshairs here at the rickety rental. How dare their technician out and out lie to me? Supervisor Sally is very contrite and apologetic as to the fact that it will be two days before she can get someone out here. So I give dear old dad the bad news and he goes back to his word find puzzle. On the appointed day, I call first thing to be sure that all is in order for the 12-2 window, and a new teleprompt informs me that I can reset my signal after an electrical outage by pressing 2. who knows, maybe running the dishwasher and the washing machine at once counts as an electrical outage. After all, the clocks are forever blinking here at the rickety rental. Please wait 40-60 minutes while we reload your channel line up. And gosh darn it it works. I cancel the service call and post the number on the fridge. All set. A week later, it's part of the routine. Put in a load of dirty clothes and towels, mop down the kitchen counters, start the dishwasher and call my friend at comcast to reload my channel line up. Until, one day, she's not there. My only option is to wait for an operator. Not, we've all had the infuriating experience of hitting “0” repeatedly and being informed in some matrix like command that that option is not valid.... press 1 to return to the main menu, dos to habla espanol and so forth. But in this case, I just want to press 2 and go on about my business. Instead, I have to try to convince customer service representative Johnny to do what she has done for me so beautifully all of these days
Hi, yes, ummm I know why my problem is, I wanted to reset my signal but the command isn't there, can you do that for me?
No ma'am, you don't have any equipment there so I am unable to do that.
Huh. that's weird, I've been doing that about once a day for the past week or so and it seems to have solved my problem.
Well that's not possible. You don't have any of our equipment over there.
Listen, your last name doesn't happen to be Elbirt does it?
What?
Never mind. Just do what I am telling you please. Don't ask questions; just do the thing that she does when I press 2. Don't tell me why it won't work, just do it please.
OK.
And about 40-60 minutes later, the channel line up loaded, Dear Old Dad settled in to watch Samantha Brown in Cambodia and is happy as a clam.
Until I decide to blow-dry my hair.