Author: Bethany

5Dec

The Sexy Eyebrows Post

As promised, the sexy eyebrows post.

I remember the exact moment enlightenment struck. I was staring at the tweezers I had brought along to college in case I got a splinter and was suddenly struck by the idea that sexy eyebrows might not be a mythological concept after all. In fact, they might even be attainable by mortal humans. Like, say, myself. And oh, look at that, I’m holding tweezers! I plucked all but my four sexiest eyebrow hairs and decided that even though I now looked exactly like Jennifer Aniston, I would stay in school. Shall we view the photographic evidence?

High school–mutant wild boar brows:

Eyebrows before

College–invisible Jennifer Aniston brows:

Eyebrows after

You may be [justifiably] horrified that I was allowed into college without knowing the true purpose of tweezers, and frankly, I am too. But in my defense, I was not taught the womanly art of good hygiene growing up. My mother had good hygiene but was far too proper to speak of it, for instance, out loud. I had to personally invent the concept of shaving under my arms, though I self-consciously pinned my arms to my sides for a few years until I realized other women did the same thing. I also had a secret stash of Teen Secret deodorant to replace the rock my mom gave me. (Note: No matter how religiously you rub a rock under your arms, it does not make you smell powder fresh. Possibly by virtue of being A ROCK.) I snuck black market shaving cream and non-organic toothpaste into the house and developed an illicit relationship with Herbal Essences conditioner, but I didn’t think to discover streamlined eyebrows until I left home. C’est la vie.

I also made the following realizations in college:
I can dye my hair beautiful colors, like oh, let’s see, blue!
Skin was obviously made for piercing.
Q-tips are.
You know, life would be that much better with eyeliner.

And it is.

5Dec

Too Sexy For My Boots

There are two requirements for being a woman in Italy:
1. Legal documents
2. Sexy boots
(Not necessarily in order of importance)

I’ve been learning that a lot of my American fashion prejudices don’t apply in Europe. For instance, that nice lady at church who I thought might be a hooker… isn’t. (Note to self: Woman standing on street corner at night wearing boots and half a napkin = hooker. Woman praying at church wearing boots plus clothing = not a hooker.) I can’t help it; in my American experience, most gals coordinating their designer heels with their designer eye shadow were trying to be either Hilary Clinton or Jessica Simpson. ::Shudder x2:: Here, however, women dress up simply because they want to look nice. And they all wear sexy boots.

You know the boots–the ones that say “My calves are so sexy I have to wrap them in black leather, and my heels are so sexy they need their own four-inch pedestals, and my toes are so sexy that they are the exact shape of a pie-server, no really.” My shoe wardrobe does not say such things. My shoes say “Yo, I can skate,” even though I can’t. But here I find myself, a woman. In Italy. And there are requirements…

So I now have my own pair of authentically sexy boots (as authenticated by my husband and my own personal feelings of oo-la-la), and there are some things you should know. First, remember that song, “These boots were made for walking”? It refers to combat boots or rain boots or any kind other than sexy boots, which are specially designed for tripping. However, all pain, inability to walk, potential crippling, etc. are entirely irrelevant in the face of such podiatric cuteness. (Just like Barbie doll feet! Except so much cuter because they’re mine!) Finally, sexy boots necessitate sexy eyebrows. But that’s a different story for a different day…

4Dec

The Death of a Boobyphobe

Though people who met me as a college freshman might disagree, I am generally shy. I’m that girl you see melting into her soup rather than speaking up at dinner parties and crying when someone at the beach has the audacity to glimpse her in her swimsuit. I’m also a boobyphobe, which happens to be the topic at hand.

Flashback to the unspeakable horrors of puberty. On second thought, let me just repress all that for you. We’ll start instead with the slightly-more-speakable horrors of my first Super Ultra Mega Top Secret Boyfriend (Now with plausible deniability! Warranty not included!). We were sitting in his truck exploring the enticing gray area beyond homeschool courtship standards, and he asked me in a voice like fornication itself what I was wearing under my tank top. Now the dilemma. I could not possibly utter the word “bra” (this scandalous term was replaced by “shoelaces” in my house, no kidding), but the alternative was saying–and thus implying–nothing. Obviously, the only dignified solution was to let him find out for himself.

Flashforward to now. Though I have had many years to get comfortable with my own bosom, I would still rather people think I cruelly starve my infant than know that I breastfeed her. But did I mention that I now live in a land of topless beaches, billboards, and book covers? A land where TV hostesses only wear strategic bits of fringe? A land where crowds of women fight to try on bras in the outdoor market? So I should not have been surprised when the following conversation happened amongst a group of ladies at church last week:

Lady #1, pointing to the innocent, unbreastly bottle I’m using to feed Sophie: “You don’t breastfeed your baby?”
Me, wishing I could be untruthful in church without crashing through a trapdoor to hell: “Um, this is my milk.”
Lady #1: “It’s your milk?”
Me: “Yes.”
Lady #1 to Ladies #2, 3, 4, 5, & 6: “It’s her milk.”
Lady #2 to Ladies #3, 4, 5, & 6: “It’s her milk.”
Lady #3: “It’s your milk?”
Lady #2: “Of course it’s her milk! Look at her!”
Lady #4: “With those breasts, how could she not have milk?”
Lady #5, incredulously, as though I have sporting goods stuck up my shirt: “You have very large breasts.”
Lady #6, gesturing with both hands: “Very large breasts.”
Lady #4: “See, how could she not have milk?”
Lady #1, showing bottle to uninvolved passerby: “That’s her milk. From her very large breasts.”

You may be asking yourself if there is a universal lesson to be learned from this story, and lucky you, there is: Don’t teach your children that bras are called shoelaces, or they will end up standing buxomly in an Italian church debating whether to just die right there or wait till they get home.

3Dec

Bucket-Free

Confession: I hate mopping. And by hate, I mean really, truly, intensely, abhorrently hate, even more than onions or politics or the aggravating need to shower occasionally regularly. Part of the reason is that I have a two-year-old, and two-year-olds see clean floors as some sort of nuclear threat that MUST BE STOPPED! as quickly and with as much ketchup as possible. The other reason is that mopping our house involves rolling up the rugs, relocating the furniture, soaking a rag in a bucket of hot, soapy water, scrubbing the floor with said rag, ringing it out, repeating until my spine begins to audibly plead for mercy, and keeping my feet and those of my active child off the floor until it dries sometime next spring. I have a favorite saying for times like these: “Yea, though our floor become a 24-hour bacterial orgy, I shall never mop again, amen.”

Today, though, everything changed. Behold, the Swiffer mop! If my husband knew how in love I am with this contraption, he would no longer leave the two of us alone without a chaperone (preferably Bob Jones himself). Disposable cleaning cloths! Swivel head! Sleek, bucket-free silhouette! For the first time in months, our kitchen floor is squeaky clean!

(And here we end with a technical discussion about the meaning of “is,” since, technically, I’m using it more in the “was” sense. As in, “Our kitchen floor was squeaky clean for at least five minutes until Natalie entered with the pickle juice, but good for her, because that kind of unprecedented cleanness just had to be stopped.”)

29Nov

That’s Why

Why? you ask, in gurgles and coos, through stretches and wiggles and dream-drenched yawns.
Well, I answer, in smiles and hums, through kisses and cuddles and heart-full hugs,
It’s your feathery duckling head, smelling like silk and serenity and baby girl secrets.
It’s your milky rosebud mouth, full of curiosity and bubbles and half-asleep giggles.
It’s your wise mirror-lake eyes, shining with newness and knowing and shy peek-a-boos.
It’s your squeaky kitten cry, resonating with innocence and milk-memory and heartfelt littleness.
It’s your soft blanket-wrapped snuggability, curled in my arms like marshmallows and puppy-love and a ball of dandelion fluff.
It’s your velvet honeybee breath,
Your dimpled button toes,
Your priceless sunbeam smile,
Your luminous butterfly soul.
That’s why, baby mine, that’s why.

Your fingers squeeze OK as you drift back to sleep, still and safe next to my skin. I love you too, Mommy mine.

27Nov

Thief, Ogre, Janitor = Mom

It’s hard to relax when you’re a thief, stealing a few minutes for music and uninterrupted breath in your sunny corner studio. Even though all your offspring are contentedly sleeping in the other room, you coach your guilt along–I should really be cleaning or editing or studying or cooking or saving the world–as though, without the guilt, you will disappear.

You dig farther into the reserve, tonguing your 9 a.m. frustration like a mouth sore. I wasn’t going to be a yelling mom. I wasn’t going to use the TV as a babysitter. I was going to smile constantly at my children, be accessible, stimulate their creativity, enjoy every minute with them. It’s worse, even, because you used to be a Good Motherâ„¢. Now, you’re mostly ogre, and the monster is coming out in your little girl, and you have no idea which prompted the other.

You don’t mean to change the subject, but there are no solutions in sight–only dusty windowsills and dirty coffee mugs. Your serotonin levels plummet under the weight of so many unfinished tasks. The physical laws of the universe dictate that housecleaning is never finished–not when people move and breathe and inhabit said house–but universal truths are no match for your dissatisfaction at uncompleted projects. You’re a terrible janitor for the same reason you’re a stellar one.

You wish you didn’t think of yourself as a janitor; no one embraces that label. Plus, it’s an overly dramatic and negative interpretation of your role as mom. It also shows a horrid mix-up in priorities; when did janitor replace playmate and teacher? And how could something as mundane and fundamentally imperfect as a house take precedence over your own children?

You swish around the guilt in your head, vaguely wondering how much of your brain it has taken over. You wonder how different your days would be if you hadn’t grown up believing that guilt was Godliness. You wonder how you can keep it from spreading like a toxic stain over your family. If only it could just be scrubbed from your persona… How did I get stuck with myself? My personality traits, my memories, my vast inadequacies? I know how to skin emus, play Chinese flute, write iambic pentameter, pronounce words in Zulu, and teach babies to sleep through the night but not how to make myself work right.

You grimace at how self-centric your thoughts have become. You don’t know if sharing your foibles with the world at large is helpful or entertaining or hideously presumptuous, and you run through the disclaimers: I still love my family. This is just a stage, compounded by a lot of major life changes. And it’s not actually that bad; I’m just a pessimist. But you know that the disclaimers will only sound fabricated, in a “she doth protest too much” way, and presumptuous or not, un-disclaimed honesty has value.

You swallow several times, write “Stop overanalyzing!” on a to-do list, and sit down to play puppies with your two-year-old daughter. The dirty dishes–and the guilt–can wait for a while.

26Nov

Pile-Up

I feel the words piling up throughout the day, then the week, like speeding cars in the fog. But these moments are not mine, even when I’m too dazed to properly distribute them among family and housework and other assorted obligations. Tomorrow, a babysitter is coming over to give me an entire morning alone with my laptop. I’m looking forward to it, but also mildly terrified that I will glance into my brain only to find that it doesn’t work anymore. Or that I won’t accomplish enough to justify the expense. Or that four hours a week won’t be enough to maintain sanity for this mama (though oh, it will help). It will be like re-assimilation, an experiment in boosting my odds. And maybe, just maybe, I’ll find some salvageable scraps among the pile-up in my head.

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