Wild River Review
Wild River Review
Connecting People, Places, and Ideas: Story by Story
May 2010
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Posts Tagged ‘New York’

Borrowing from Vanity Fair…

Thursday, May 24th, 2012

Hello to all! Hope this post finds everybody well. It’s been a while since my last post and I’ve had a lot of life in between. To convey this in a way that I hope will hold your interest, I’ve decided to borrow from a popular column in Vanity Fair, where they feature photos of celebrities and ask them to act out their responses to a particular situation or emotion (for example, “you’ve just eaten something that’s spoiled” or “you’re really mad at the driver who just cut you out”, etc.). I have always been intrigued by that particular section. Instead of showing you a photo of my face, however, I’m going to share my most innermost thoughts about those scenarios that made an impact on me most recently. Enjoy!

A stranger insults you on the street…

A few weeks ago, I was in New York visiting some girlfriends for the weekend. As I walked the some three or four miles from Midtown to the hotel in Soho where I was staying (after lunch with a client, in heels, with a roller bag in tow and the blisters to show for it, thank you very much), some young guy (think early 20s) walking beside me looked at me and then looked again and said, “Hey, you have beautiful eyes.”

He was tall and swarthy with a thick accent and made no secret of his ogling a variety of women within eyesight.  But it seemed he only called out to me (at least in that moment, and maybe because I gave off a vibe that I really needed to hear it). And while I found that creepy, I also felt grateful for the attention—in a way that one might feel when they’re crawling up the ass of 50. It felt good to know that I wasn’t invisible (yet) in the sea of youthful beauties around me, sipping lattes from green and white cups, walking swiftly in their short skirts from their newly minted jobs to their barely affordable studio apartments, thinking they’ll never be anything but young. 

In response to his comment, I looked up only momentarily to meet his gaze and said, “Thanks.” Then, back down my eyes went as I picked up my pace. To which he said, “What, you’re not going to talk to me?” To which I said, “Sorry, I’ve got to meet somebody.”  Creeeee-peee.  To which he said this:

“That’s okay. You’re too old for me anyway. You could be old enough to be my mother.”

It was as if someone hit me in the chest with a long bag of rice.  I could feel the breath form a knot in my chest and then leave my body in short uncomfortable bursts. Did he really say that? Not only touch a nerve, but rub it with sandpaper, throw it on the ground, stomp on it, and then feed it to the pigeons in the park?

When I recounted the story later that night to my almost-50-too friends, my long-time pal Jill (who enjoys aging, doesn’t mind the physical after effects, and, to the contrary, loves the story the fine lines on her face have to tell) said: “Well? You could be old enough to be his mother, Jill. So WHAT?”

But still. I don’t want to look old enough to be anybody’s mother (unless they’re still wearing baby diapers and sucking on a pacifier). Now that I’m over the horror of it all (sort of, okay, not really)—which took some time since I’m a person who makes no secret of clinging to her youth, of wanting people to be utterly shocked when I tell them how old I am, of refusing to believe I shouldn’t be shopping at stores like Forever 21 because a cardigan is for all ages (right?)—I’m pissed.  

You just lost your best friend…

Well, I guess it’s official: No more bestie for Jill. And I’m moving into the next stage of grief: Goodbye Denial. I won’t miss you Anger. I’ve been waiting for you, Sadness. (Say, what time do you expect your friend Acceptance? I’ll set an extra place in my frontal cortex…Bargaining is welcome, but by now, I really don’t see the point…)

So what happened, you ask? Beats me. I left my formerly best friend Lorrie’s house last September (yes, 2011) after a lovely evening with her and her family to celebrate Yom Kippur (where we vowed to make it an annual ritual) and had no idea that I would never see or speak to her again.

We have been friends for 40 years. That’s 160 seasons OR 14,600 days respectively (if you’re counting). We have shared four decades of hopes, dreams, tears, laughter, husbands, boyfriends, children, jobs, holidays, tea parties (at college, with our stuffed bears, in the middle of the night, during finals mostly) and most importantly, feelings. And yet, she has completely cut me out of her life and I have no idea why.

Sad really.  Life is so short. People, if you’re mad at somebody for something—or even a little bugged—just tell them. Give them a chance to respond.

You just realized you can’t do that anymore…

And you thought I was talking about a split, climbing the ropes, or wearing hot blue spandex. Silly, I’m not. I’m talking about the fact that my niece is living my life – or should I say, the life I once lived when I was not almost 50. She is young, a new college grad readying to go into the world as a communications professional, living in a one-bedroom apartment in the city. I know it’s her life, but it was once mine as well. So many years ago, when I thought, like the pretty girls walking the streets of Manhattan, I’d always have the world at my feet …

Big sigh.

You just realized you’re not the only one on earth with this problem…

I was trying on cardigan and boyfriend jeans and long-sleeved tee’s at Talbot’s this past weekend (yes, I’m shopping at Talbot’s now – what’s happening to me?), when a woman in the dressing room next to me asked if a shirt she was trying on looked “okay” on her? Turns out she had just lost 11 pounds. On Weight Watchers. And “at age 52, that’s no easy feat”. After all, the weight wants to cling to her like a pack of leeches. Lack of sleep is not helping, springing up at 3 a.m. every night is just cruel. And the mood swings? I can’t imagine, she said.

I really can’t.

To which I laughed. Oh really? I said.

Try me.

You just found out something you thought was true really isn’t…

Turns out, I can eat mayonnaise and it doesn’t make me gain weight. (Scallops and bacon, now that’s another story…) Who knew?

You just had a really good idea and can’t wait to explore it…

A big cozy desk, in front of the long windows in the living room that nobody ever uses. After all, who needs an old piano that’s always out of tune? A sofa that nobody sits on (except the hairy dog, sorry Winnie)? An rattan chair from Pottery Barn’s 2000 collection that, frankly, is owed a Rolex?

I have been thinking for a while now about creating a sacred space from which to write. I’ve had those spaces all my life, in every place I’ve lived, except in this house. I just haven’t been able to pinpoint just the right spot … until now (perhaps?).

How about you? What stories would you tell in response to these prompts? What are you feeling these days? Angry, hopeful, confused? Do tell. And come see me at the Philadelphia Writers Conference on Saturday, June 9. I’ll be giving a workshop on blogging. For more info, go to http://pwcwriters.org/.  Finally, if we don’t talk, have a great holiday weekend. (And call your best friend, would ya?)

Until next time!

Decomposition for weight loss

Friday, September 10th, 2010

So, I’ve been sparing all of you from this since my diets must be boring to all of you at this point. However, I am on a new one (on the heels of a 21-cleanse mind you, big sigh, I sure do deserve to be a thin). It’s called Fatloss4idiots.com. Have you ever heard of it? It’s gotten a lot of reviews (almost 100 percent good) on the Internet and seems to be working well for my friend who has Celiac’s and a screwed up metabolism like I do.

Essentially, it’s an 11-day diet plan that has you confined to a handful of foods (you choose) in all different combinations to create “calorie confusion”. It sure is simple to follow. And heck, at this point, I’d eat shoes for 11 days if it held the promise of even a one-pound weight loss. So, I’ll keep you posted. All I can say is I’m on day six and if I never see another piece of Orange Roughy again, well, it’ll be too soon.

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So I went to a new doctor in the never-ending quest to figure out why decomposition looks like my only realistic option for shrinking. She’s in New York, which is not around the corner, but from the looks of the first visit, I am encouraged. She comes highly recommended as an internist who does a good job at bridging the gap between Western and Eastern treatments, so what the heck. I’m giving her a shot. (www.drdanacohen.com)

And while I was there, I must say, she did ask me lots of new questions (what did you eat for dinner last night, breakfast this morning, lunch?) and suggested that I “complain to her”. Oh joy oh rapture, did my heart skip a beat on that one! (Mama loves me some complainin’ – just ask my poor husband, now as invested in my weight loss and hormonal balance as if it were a new no-lose stock coming his way on an inside tip.)

I went to see her last Friday when I was almost done with the cleanse. (Not that you asked, but I haven’t had sugar, wheat, gluten, caffeine [okay, that was not pretty], or dairy for about 33 days, 12 hours, 22 minutes, and 8 seconds, but who’s counting.) On top of the adrenal stress, she seems to think I may have quite the inspired thyroid issue—the holy grail of medical conditions for us aging Jewish girls—which made me want to scream “JUST GIVE ME THE PILL FOR GOD’S SAKES ALREADY”—but alas, I remained composed. And I won’t know whether that’s the case until I see her again next Friday.

In fact I’m looking forward to it much the way I used to look forward to a first date with a new hot guy (but not a blind date, oh good God, not one of those).

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In the meantime, as I wait, I continue to dream of grande skim lattes in long white dresses and International Delight Creamers as attendants (mostly Vanilla and Hazelnut flavored). In lieu of my beloved coffee, I’ve been trying to embrace green tea as a reasonable substitute. But I have to tell you, it falls short of the mark.

I mean, you’re either a coffee person or a tea person; you’re either a dog person or a cat person; you’re either a cruise person or a Europe person; you’re either a meat-eater or a vegetarian. I am a coffee, dog, European, carnivore. (Take that, Meyers Briggs.) That’s just the thick and thin of it. I will never own a cat, go on a cruise, or forego a good hamburger for a tofu sandwich. But I WILL come to love tea if it kills me – and it just might. (Just ask my colleagues, who must listen to me make fake spitting noises every time I take a sip from my mug.)

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And so, you may be wondering: Am I any thinner since all this insanity began? Has the cleanse washed any unwanted fat cells from my body, detoxified my liver to the point of a new dress size? Am I depuffifying as a result of eliminating good things like creamer and  cereal and mayonnaise? The answer is NO.

N.O.

But I am a whole heck of a lot crabbier. That is a certainty.

Can anybody relate? Hello? Is anybody out there? Is this thing turned on?

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So it’s Rosh Hashannah (Happy New Year my fellow Jewish folk!) and I’m still on my Fatloss4idiots.com program. (Are you still with me – I know, I’m rambling.) My mother, bless her heart, decides to bring the family together to celebrate the holiday. Not so unusual. And in true fashion, she makes a veritable cornucopia of my favorites: Quinoa (yummy), beef brisket with roasted carrots (shut up), roasted zucchini of the green and yellow variety, and a nice large salad with Craisins and slivered almonds, and fresh cucumbers and tomatoes and salad dressing. All followed up with a delightful vanilla pudding, whipped cream concoction that is deliciously processed and lovely.

I ate a small piece of Orange Roughy and 12 cashews, as instructed by my FatLoss4idiots “diet generator”. Is anybody else starting to tear up or is it just me?

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If the doctor next Friday tells me I’m perfectly fine. If she tells me that if she strapped me to a table and didn’t feed me for two weeks that I’d lose weight. If she suggests this size 12 body goes in for a gastric bypass consultation. If she tells me my numbers are all in normal ranges and I simply need to meditate. If she tells me it’s all in my head. If she tells me just to accept my body and myself for who I am, I am just lovely. If she tells me I carry my weight well, who would ever have guessed it. If she tells me she can’t for the life of her see any problems in my blood tests, in my saliva, in my urine. If she tells me that she believes there’s something truly wrong with me, that I’m not crazy, but she simply can’t help me. If she tells me that the sky is falling and Chicken Little is really a gorilla. If she tells me that the human head weighs six pounds. If she tells me that I’ve got a really good personality. If she tells me that I’ve won a $250 gift certificate to Walmart or where to get cheap Viagra. If she tells me any of these things, I’m going to eat the largest, messiest hamburger on earth—replete with gluten-infested bread, mayonnaise, ketchup, mustard, and pickles, French fries, and a large mud pie for dessert—and then I’m going to hurl myself off of the Brooklyn Bridge.

Just so you know.

Oh, and it doesn’t help that one of the members of my team at work (around my age too!) is about the size of a swizzle stick and walks around the office making proclamations like: “Okay, now that that newsletter’s done, it’s donut time!” Or, “I love that meatball sandwich. Can you order me that and a piece of cheesecake for dessert?” Or, “Did somebody say there’s bagels and cream cheese in the small kitchen?” (Mind you, I didn’t know this when I hired her.)

Oh God.

So, how’s your diet going?

Until next time.

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