Sunday, December 22, 2013

Adventures in Editing






The Advent calendar on the laundry room door, circa 2001. My youngest daughter and her cousin play with post-Christmas plunder.

This was my first experience with what is termed "the editing process." The first iteration of this post-Sandy Christmas story was a blog post in early December.  I re-worked the piece and submitted it to the New York Times for their consideration and wonder of wonders it was accepted. The editors (there were several) were wonderful, especially Mike Winerip, the editor of the Booming blog to which it was sent. Mike made it clear from the get-go that the essay - with my input and approval - would have to be edited because of time constraints.  Which was fine with me  - who am I to argue with the New York Times?  The result is a better linear narrative, and I have to say I have rarely been as thrilled as I was when I saw the essay in print this morning in the Metropolitan section of the Sunday Times.









Thursday, December 5, 2013

Advent


We had an Advent calendar, purchased when the children were young that I never liked very much.  A wall hanging of a gold-knobbed Christmas tree above 25 tiny pockets stuffed with festive items like toys or candy canes or reindeer heads or Santa’s disembodied face, it was hauled out every December 1st   (when I remembered) from the attic eave where it had been gathering dust since the previous January. The calendar was soft, and made of cloth, because in those fraught days of rearing four children under the age of five, I had learned the hard way, many times over, of the perils of having fragility within the easy reach of small, curious hands. So I passed over lovely advent medieval styled structures made of wood with hinged doors, and I passed over cardboard Gothic churches with stained glass windows, and there was even something from the Metropolitan Museum of Art that I had my eye on, but ultimately Lillian Vernon won the day and so began eighteen years of something I didn't even know was a sacred and cherished family tradition, until this year, when the calendar went missing. I had, of course, forgotten that I had thrown it out with the rest of the post-Christmas detritus two years ago, until inquiries were made by my eldest daughter and my eldest son hazily recollected my perceived betrayal. It must be understood that the calendar was discarded because it was broken; nevertheless, howls of outrage emanated from upstate New York, and western Massachusetts, and Hell’s Kitchen, and Bushwick, where the children are now scattered, in college, or starting their independent lives.

The reason it took two years for this lack of my foresight to come to light was that last year, at this time, our family was still displaced by the after-affects of Hurricane Sandy and the holiday I managed to hobble together after the devastation of the region, our neighborhood, and our home, was rather meager compared to previous bacchanals. Bereft of well-loved and remembered decorations, because frankly, there was not an inch to spare as the six of us were crammed into two upstairs rooms, I remember how grateful I was for the invention of etiquette, for that thin veneer of politeness was what prevented us from killing each other. And so we lived to see another Christmas.

I question the value of an Advent Calendar now - especially because, for our family, it is purely secular.  Is it time to declare a moratorium on childhood pursuits such as countdowns to presents? Or is there something else at work here, a kind of seasonal alchemy that revisits the magic - and surely there is no greater magic in this world than happily remembered childhood Christmases - and solidifies the grace and love of family?




Monday, December 2, 2013

The 15-Second Elevator Pitch Fail



Perusing the items displayed at a private sale I attended yesterday, I came across this beauty.  Perfect for the smart, metropolitan career woman, I couldn't justify even my fashion lust for this bag, because I am not a career woman - smart, metropolitan, or otherwise.

It is said that a 15 second elevator pitch is necessary to brand oneself, and even that I can’t do, as evidenced by my conversation with a woman I’m pretty sure writes for the New York Times, as we pondered the merits of the satchel’s python leather. When asked, “What do you do?” I was spontaneously, spectacularly inarticulate.


Note to self:  Work On This.

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Musing About Second Acts









This book, O My America! by Sara Wheeler seems like essential reading for me right now at the age of 54; my children still evolving but essentially grown, my formal education complete, and a recession-driven drought of applicable jobs for this mid-life, math-phobic, technologically rusty woman. Wheeler profiles six 19th century English women who fled to the U.S. after rejecting the belief in the culturally ingrained idea - still so prevalent today - that once you hit the age of 50, life remains static, its usefulness gone. I am besotted by these women, this author, this seizing of life. Because I am still boiling, still seething, with the mad desire to create, to experience, to teach, to do.

Read this kick-ass review, by Caroline Moorehead, in today's Wall Street Journal:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324747104579024960285940366.html



Monday, September 9, 2013

Life's Lemons into Limoncello


Dr. Norman Rosenthal, author, The Gift of Adversity. “Look within to gauge your worth rather than depending on institutions or the opinions of others, for institutions rise and fall and fashions come and go, but a good sense of your own value will see you through life’s ups and downs.” Read Jane Brody's column in the New York Times.

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/09/09/lifes-hard-lessons/

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Ten Months On

The gutted downstairs of our home, late November, 2012:

Today:


They Call It Hurricane Sandy. October 28, 2012.



 

Where I live: the south shore of Long Island. Pondering Hurricane Sandy and the media hysteria.  To evacuate, or not to evacuate? Too soon to tell whether the chattering heads are on the money or not, and in the meantime, I'm getting ready for my first day as an "Associate" at an upscale housewares store at the local mall. Haven't worked holiday retail since a stint at Toys R Us in 1977.  Despite the fact that myriad submissions of resumes, cover letters, writing samples, and multi-page on-line applications to government, corporate, and non-profit entities have yielded no responses whatsoever in the almost two years since I've graduated, my motto remains "Onward and Upward!"

Early Morning, October 29, 2012. Lido Beach, NY.

We evacuated. It's taken me almost a year to write about what we've been through.



Salvaged From The Wreckage

My mother Roberta, and my sister Elizabeth, circa 1986. Long Beach, New York boardwalk. The photo was rescued from an album saturated by the tidal surge of Hurricane Sandy. This is a link to an article detailing my experience in the immediate aftermath of the storm.