A Short History of Makeup

I pulled this out of the drafts folder. I wrote it last Fall.

When I was in high school I went through a Makeup Phase. I desperately wanted to wear makeup. My parents were as desperate that I should not. So, ever the dutiful daughter, I respected their wishes. Ha ha ha, no, I wore it in secret, of course. I had a big, plastic, grocery store bag full of makeup hidden under my bed. Periodically my mother would take it away and hide it in her room. I would sneak in there and take it back, one lip gloss at a time. My big obsession was concealer because a) I had dark circles under my eyes (or so I thought) and b) it doesn’t count as makeup because if you do it right, no one sees it! Camo for your face.

In my ’20s when I was staying up late and often too drunk to remember to wash my face, I stopped with the makeup. Besides, nothing is more beautiful than a drunk 20-something. Do I need to further adorn such amazing beauty? I do not, and I need the money for beer. Bonus: if you never wear makeup and then wear some on your wedding day, people will think you just walked out of Vogue Magazine. Keep those standards low, people.

These days, I paint my toenails and put on lip balm and I’m on my way. For special occasions, I buy a new mascara. My special occasions are rare enough that if I used the same mascara it would give me eyelash botulism or whatever you get when you use an old mascara. “They” (ladymags, internet doctors, etc.) advise buying new mascara every three months.

I do have an especial weakness for lip gloss, but I also forget to apply it. I just carry it around in my purse and every once in a while, when I switch to a different purse, I find FIVE MORE LIP GLOSSES that I forgot about. Also, they are all burgundy. Why do I need to buy multiple, redundant copies of burgundy lip glosses? Someone analyze this for me? Thanks.

Lately, when I look in the mirror I am kind of horrified by my reflection. As in, I haven’t slept enough for five years. I am 37 years old. I frequently do not consume enough water. And of course I have that weird itchy skin thing that only comes around sometimes and only in some places —

— anyway, I look in the mirror and I am kind of horrified. Even pictures of me from a few years ago, when Trombone was a baby, are preferable. They are even dewy, some of them. Maybe our old camera was lower resolution? Maybe that’s why all the cool kids are going back to Polaroid?

Today (by which I mean last September, which is when I started this post,) Fresco and I were at Superstore while Trombone was at school. As we strolled through the store, killing time, getting groceries, I spotted those little compacts of pressed powder. Pressed powder is like concealer; it doesn’t really count as makeup. In theory, it should blot the shine and smooth out the blotches in your skin. That is just what I need, I thought. Just a little…blotting and smoothing.

I stared at the choices: Ultra pale. Fair. Medium. Beige. Dark. Bronzer.

I decided I wasn’t Beige. The Medium looked like pale Beige. The Dark and Bronzer were dark and bronze Beige, respectively. So I chose Fair. There were no testers. You just have to look at the little compact and go, yeah, that looks like my skin. I asked Fresco, but he was no help at all since he was testing those toothbrushes that spin.

Brilliant jackass that I am, I decided to apply my new, Fair pressed powder to my blotchy, reddish/whitish skin in the parking lot of Superstore ten minutes before we had to be back at the school to get Trombone. In my imagination, the Fair powder covered my skin with kisses and made it all smooth and one Fair, non-shiny, totally natural colour.

I tore open the packaging and pulled out the little powder puffy thing and blot! blot! smear!ed it all over my face and then looked at myself in the mirror with an expectant smile. Oh! So it turns out I have kind of an olive tone to my skin — shouldn’t I know this by now? — and this powder had kind of a pinky tone to it. My face looked, well, it looked like a baby’s ass. In a bad way. In a way that clashed with my neck, which now looked jaundiced by comparison.

Well, I thought. Maybe in the time it takes us to drive back to preschool, my skin’s oils will PUSH through the powder barrier and SOAK the powder with —

— yeah I don’t know what I thought. I hoped it would settle into my skin and look less powdery and fake. It didn’t. By the time I was back at the school I looked more like a clown than a baby’s ass, which I am sure you will agree is not much of an improvement.

I scrubbed my face with a baby wipe. That helped, uh, let’s see, not at all.

When I applied one of my burgundy lip glosses, thinking it might distract from my pink, powdery face, I appeared to turn into a full-on female impersonator, so I gave up. I pulled up the hood on my sweatshirt, threw on some sunglasses and kept my head down.

My mother was right. I don’t need makeup. And if you’re that terrified of your reflection, better to just run with it.

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Choosing Your Battles, er, Metaphors

It could be the (nearly) five year old. It could be the boy. It could be being the big brother. It could be the moon. It could be the lack of sleep. It could be sharing a bedroom. It could be hormones in the milk. It could be the neighbour kid’s influence. It could be television’s influence. It could be genetic.

It could be all of those things.

It is probably all of those things.

It used to be easier to choose my battles. There were only three a week. I picked one. Now there are fifty a day and they cascade with very dark dependency and I don’t know if this hour’s ‘clean up your own spilled milk’ will affect ‘a quick pee before we leave for the park please’. Should I push it? Do I care enough? Will I have had enough sleep tomorrow to fight the ‘clean up your own spilled milk’ battle, or should I do it now because I’m going to be up late tonight and tomorrow it will be a far more bloody battle.

The battle is a series of fights. The war is parenthood.

No! Parenthood is not a war. War is real. War is terrible. Parenthood is long, intense, sometimes very fun, sometimes very not fun. A bad day at the beach is not armed conflict storming that beach.

New analogy!

Parenthood is a day at the beach. Sometimes there is duck shit everywhere. Sometimes it’s sunny and you get to swim. Sometimes you get sand in your drawers and it itches for a week. Sometimes the clouds roll in and suddenly you are very, very cold.

Parenthood is weather.

The forecast calls for sun and yet it pisses rain for a month. Every day, you examine the forecast closely. Every day, you stare at the sky and get rain in your eyes. Every day, you put your boots on and your same old smelly rain coat and you go out and you say, well, at least it’s warm. At least it’s not windy. At least we didn’t plan to go to the beach today.

I am approaching parenting the way I always have, with a reasoned approach, a few rules, plenty of discussion, and a boatload of hugs at the ready, but my advances are more often rejected in favour of being screamed at. He likes to scream at me. I thought the other day, “but, *I* haven’t yelled in weeks! It’s not me making him do this!” I really felt like it had to be me, like I had to be the one who was making him be who he is.

There is the secret. I am not making him be who he is. I never was. He was always him, with a fine shellac of me coating him. He is busting out of that shellac. He is him. Clean of metaphor, free of analogy. He is mad as hell and he isn’t going to take it anymore. If I could just get it, already. If I would just listen, he could stop screaming.

(but it’s still not cool to scream at your mother)

(I mean, I respect your autonomy and all)

(but)

I always write some variation of this post whenever one of my kids is about to bust out into a fully-rehearsed version of Guys and Dolls the Musical. But I never know I’m going to write this post when I start it. I always just start out thinking my kid is unbelievably annoying and at the end realize it’s growth.

The growing pains are for good. I know. It’s darkest before the dawn. I know. I can see clearly now the rain is gone. Etc.

But I still need to shake off his growing-angst, because it’s contagious. I will channel the energy into something else. Like, um, marathons? Or — hot yoga! I will turn on my fireplace and do yoga until the sun comes out.

When the sun has been out for a few days, I will forget about all of this rain. Until the next time. Being a parent is like being a cat … a Vancouverite … a goldfish …

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Julie’s Five Things: A Black Ballpoint Pen

( Part One)

Julie waited three days before calling the phone number on the flyer. She spent those three days alternately wishing for more gumption and continuing to regret the gumption she had already shown.

She plucked her grey chin hairs. She tried on all the clothes in her closet and tried to imagine what it would be like to take them off for someone she barely knew. She told herself she would be fine. She corrected herself; she would be OK. She glanced at her bedside table and saw post-it number three: Say what you mean.

She told herself she would be terrified but it would probably be worth it.

She took her clothes off and examined her underwear. She would definitely need new underwear.

Julie’s eyes skipped over post-it number five. Call L, it read. She considered it and discarded the thought, as she did several times every day.

She put her jeans and t-shirt back on and went to the hall telephone, where the flyer sat, waiting.

The group organizer’s name was Shar.

“Short for Charlotte?” Julie asked.

“Well, that would be Ch-ar, wouldn’t it,” laughed Shar. She had a loud laugh. Julie had to hold the phone a few inches from her ear.

“Right, so…” Julie said.

“So, so, so,” said Shar, “yes. So. We meet once a week. We meet on Fridays because none of us has anything to do on Fridays. At the coffee shop at the corner of 10th Avenue and… oh now what’s the cross street. Do you know the shop? It’s a Shotz Coffee. 10th and … shoot.”

“Feather Street?” Julie offered.

“FEATHER STREET,” Shar shouted. “YES. Thank you.”

“You’re — ”

“Anyway, come! You should come. You sound like you need a group. You need some peer support. Right? Is that why –”

Julie paused before answering. Partly she wanted to see if Shar would keep yelling. Partly she didn’t know if it was true that she needed some peer support. There was a small, niggling part of her that wanted to pick each word from Shar’s sentence and analyze it. Julie guessed that was the scared part.

She moved the phone closer to her mouth.

“Some writers,” she said. “I need some writers.”

“Well, we got those!” Shar said. “Eight PM. Bring something to read.”

Bring something to read, Julie thought. She thought about calling Shar back and asking what exactly. A magazine? Was there a waiting room? No, it was a coffee shop. Then she realized; something to read to the group. Something she, Julie, had written.

**

For the first hour, Julie sat at her kitchen table. She had a brand-new spiral-bound notebook in front of her; red, for luck. A glass of water sat next to the book. Her right hand clutched a black, ballpoint pen. There were several identical pens on the other side of the water glass. The kitchen clock ticked and ticked.

“Biography or autobiography?” Julie asked the empty room.

“Mystery? Romance? Spy?”

The kitchen clock ticked and ticked.

Julie took a drink of water and immediately had to pee.

“No way,” she said to her bladder. “That was too fast. There’s no way the water moved that fast. We sit here until one page is done.”

Julie wrote,

The kitchen clock ticked and ticked. No one knew there was blood in the cupboard. No one but him.

She wrote it again, and again, quickly, madly, until the page was full. Then she went to the bathroom and let loose what felt like a pint of pee.

For the second hour, Julie took her notebook and her pens and moved to the living room. She sat on the floor, leaning against the couch. The notebook was too floppy on her knees, so she had to bend over and write on the wood floor.

Julie flipped to the second page and wrote,

His name was Samuel and he had come to the city to kill. The first house that caught his eye had a wide-open front door and smelled deliciously of bacon. He rang the doorbell and when Martha came to answer it, he stabbed her, right through the screen.

Julie shivered. She sat up straight and tried to remember if she had closed her front door. Of course, if this Martha person had a screen door, then her door wasn’t wide open, or was it? That part was hardly clear. And was this man a hired killer? Was he coming to kill someone specific? Was it her blood in the cupboard?

Julie took her pen and held it over the first sentence. She stared at the sentence, which seemed out of place, somehow. It looked like it had been written by a child. The loops were too big and what was that word? she couldn’t recognize it. Oh — stabbed. Her penmanship was terrible, always had been, but who could blame her? She had only written grocery lists for the past thirty years.

Most people had computers now, anyway. She would have to get a better computer, if she hoped to communicate with real writers. What use was handwriting, when everyone used computers. For that matter, why had she wasted almost ten dollars on a notebook and pens? That was ten dollars she could have put towards a new computer. Or a book about how to use the computer she already had.

What was the use. What was the goddamn use.

Julie looked at her sentences again. She flipped to the first page and had to laugh at the rise and fall of her handwriting, how the pen carved into the paper with such desperation. She could see her own anger, right there on the page. She could see her resistance to being disciplined, as though she was both teacher and student. She guessed she was both, after all.

Julie left the sentence alone. She had read somewhere that you shouldn’t edit as you go. She closed her notebook. It was two days until the writing group and she would have something to share if it killed her.

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Notes From Mother’s Journal: Keeping Energy Levels High Edition

Since the trip to the library:

– We made it to preschool, finally, after a professional day, a stat holiday and a Barf Day, all of which added up to a long ten (thousand!) days of no school. Children are social creatures who need peer support, I learned again, for the eightieth time.

– Oh god — summer vacation is two weeks away. I need more five year olds, stat. And a field.

– We made it to a playdate at a friend’s house, after having to cancel for Barf Day last week. Four children who are nearly exactly the same age as each other (two of each age, plus one incredibly adorable infant who, sorry, will be unmatched by another child of mine) played delightfully together and it made me want to move into their house but I won’t because there isn’t any room for me and the little girl (age 3) told me I couldn’t sleep on their porch swing because ‘it wasn’t a bed.’ Three year olds! So RIGID!

– We made it to gymnastics on Thursday afternoon. Trombone has been taking gymnastics for almost 10 weeks and he has loved it. There is tumbling and trampolining and an hour’s worth of jumping around. But two weeks ago, we went to gymnastics after a full day of IKEA and meatballs for lunch and *verylittle resting* and then a run through the park. Five minutes after I dropped him off in the gym, some lady was following me outside because ‘[your] son is crying and doesn’t want to stay.’

Me: What’s the matter?
Trombone, sobbing: I just…don’t have….any ….. energy.

So we left, ate some snacks, played quietly at home and that was that.

This is not the first time he has burst into tears because he feels he lacks energy. And while I understand the compulsion to cry about it (and yes, I understand that he is not-quite-five, also) I don’t get where this is coming from. The previous time that he cried about not having energy was at school in a very small, low-key, supportive ‘hop-a-thon’ to raise money for Muscular Dystrophy and his teacher assured me that there was no life-threatening going on. I believe her. She is a trustworthy sort.

My only other suspect is a tv show called “Bo on the Go,” which features an animated girl named Bo who moves constantly for half an hour and implores her viewers to do the same because, “When you move with me, you give me energy.” Either she is communicating with the children via an inaudible-to-adults frequency and telling them, “If you run out of energy YOU DIE” or else there was an offhand comment made by someone, possibly months ago, to that same effect, ie: you die when your body runs out of energy.

The latter is more likely, though I don’t remember it.

Anyway! On Thursday we conquered Trombone’s fear of going to gymnastics (he missed last week too, because of Barf Day) by having me sit there for the whole hour in case he ran out of energy and expired right there on the floor of the Queen’s Park Arenex.

He did not.

Luckily, SA was home for the first day of his four-day mini-vacation so he stayed home with Fresco and I could sit in the gym, plowing through my novel editing while trying not / to eavesdrop on the moms next to me who were going into very gory details about the public school system and their treatment of gifted children.

– After gymnastics we went to Boston Pizza to celebrate our tenth anniversary. Yes! SA and I have been married for TEN YEARS. TEN. I did not buy him a gift of tin or aluminum, although beer comes in tins, right? Be right back.

We decided to take the kids out for dinner for our anniversary. Because we never take them out for dinner, all week the kids talked about going out for dinner and what kind of pizza they were going to eat —

Trombone: I’m having a pizza with parmesan cheese.
Fresco: I’m having a pizza with grilled cheese cheese cheese (yes, that’s how he says it)
Trombone: You should TRY parmesan. How do you know if you like it if you don’t try it?
Me: *head implodes*

— but when we got there they both ordered chicken strips and fries.

There was WHL hockey on the TV. I felt very suburban, all of a sudden. I drank a caesar. I never do that unless I am in a family restaurant, who knows why.

– On Friday I went shoe-shopping with my mother and we had a very nice lunch. Now is not the time for me to buy shoes, apparently, because I came home with six very fragrant onion bagels from Solly’s. Coincidentally, I got a seat on the skytrain.

– We went to the Burnaby Farmers Market where I bought Crack Granola, which is actually called “Nourish-ola” and made by a local company called Vancouver Natural Gourmets. The woman at the tent gave me a sample and it was so good I immediately wanted more, which is unusual for me and free samples. It is organic, raw granola made from almonds, coconut, pumpkin seeds, figs, and agave. Seriously, you guys.

– Also yesterday, Fresco succumbed to — we think — the same stomach bug that Trombone had. He emptied his guts all morning, took a four (FOUR) (4) hour nap in the afternoon, woke much improved, slept all night and today is pretty much back to his regular self, knock wood, amen.

– Today is the last day of SA’s mini vacation and to celebrate, I sent him shopping for groceries.

– I read that article about the em-dash and reading it made me physically ill. The writer uses the em-dash incorrectly to illustrate that too many people use it incorrectly and concludes that we shouldn’t use it as much. That whole conceit didn’t work for me. Why? Because I think she could have made her point without writing badly.

– PS: —

– PPS: I am all out of energy now.

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Real, True Conversations

Today, over morning snack:

Me: What would you guys like to do this morning?
Trombone, almost-5: I don’t know, maybe go to the Burnaby library?
Fresco, age 3: We just WENT to the library.
Trombone: Not the Burnaby one. And anyway, I like it there.
Fresco: Well I’m taking this flashlight with me.
Trombone: I’m taking this water gun.
Me: Hate to interrupt. But why would you take a water gun to the library?
Trombone: To play with.
Me: There are books there. That’s what the library is for. It’s for books.
Trombone: Fine. Can I take a toy?
Me: Yes. A small toy. I happen to know where there are some…

Me: Oh, by the way Fresco, you can’t take a flashlight to the library.
Fresco: *falls to the floor, weeping* Whyyyyyy?
Me: Indeed.
Fresco, louder: WHY?
Me: Because it would distract people from the books.
Fresco: Fine. I’ll take Superdog.
Me: *sigh*
Trombone: Well if he’s taking Superdog, I’m taking Buzz Lightyear.
Me: No.
Trombone: Why? He’s an action figure. He’s pretty small.
Me: HE MAKES NOISE.
Trombone: People make noise.
Me: Not at the library. Things shouldn’t make noise at the library. Beeping, robot noises. Unacceptable.
Trombone: Fine. I will take these two Matchbox cars. This one shoots fire and this one shoots pirates.
Me: OK. Whatever. Get your shoes on, please.

*get shoes on*
*get coat on*
*get out to car*
*get to library*
*get out of car*
*waiting for elevator to library*

Trombone: Oh! I forgot my cars!
Fresco: Well, I didn’t forget Superdog! *waves Superdog around like a fucking gold medal*
Trombone: But now I have no toy. I have no toy!
Me: I am leaving you in the parking lot.
Trombone: No!
Me: No. But stop it. We are going in to look at books now.
Trombone: Fine.

At the library I twice rescued Superdog from drooling toddlers with squeaking shoes and questionable morals. And when we got home I picked up my accordion and sang the chorus from “Ship of Fools” until the children ran screaming from the room and stayed gone long enough for me to have a stiff drink.

Only part of that last paragraph is true.

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