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The Real Cost of Kitchen-Based Therapy

12.10.2012 by J. Doe // 2 Comments

I get on the scale one morning and it tells me something I don’t want to hear: a very large number. A number twenty larger than the number it told me just over a year ago.

This scale was originally owned by The Departed, so there’s a good chance that it, like its previous owner, is a liar.

Unfortunately, I have a closet full of pants that were all purchased by me alone, and they agree with the scale.

It all feels rather conspiratorial and, frankly, a bit rude.

I’ve baked a lot over the past year, and discovered candymaking too, sometimes spending an entire free day in the kitchen cranking out muffins and cakes for no one in particular. Baking feels so therapeutic: You beat the hell out of some batter and are rewarded with a treat at the end.

I had thought it was cheaper than therapy too, since flour and eggs don’t cost much. But now the trash-talking scale and traitorous pants have ganged up on me like so many mean girls, and I feel like I have two choices: Spend more money than therapy ever would have cost on a closet full of new clothes, or go on a diet.

As angry as I am at the pants, my wallet insists me I really have only one option.

Something else happens right around that time: My dance card fills up. I look at the calendar and realize that for the entire month of December, I do not have one single free weekend day.

Now, I could talk about the fact that this never – and I mean never – happens to me. I’ve wondered for years why people are so stressed this time of year, when all you have to do is shop and bake and decorate and watch It’s a Wonderful Life as many times as you can. This year, though, I am invited to Christmas parties and ornament exchanges and even a Mayan-themed end-of-the world party, which has to be the best party idea ever. Who cares what you eat! You won’t get on the scale afterward; there won’t be any scale. Who cares who you kiss under the mistletoe! The pictures will never appear on Facebook; there won’t be any Facebook.

We could talk about why this never, ever happened to me before, but I think we all know the reason and this is not the season for dead horse flogging.

No, the real concern I have is this: What am I going to wear when nothing in my closet fits and I have so little money to go buy anything that does?

In late November, I receive an invitation to a girls’ night out. You know the kind I mean: you are expected to buy something, and even if the hostess says, Oh, just come for a glass of wine and don’t worry about it, that’s just not possible and everyone involved knows it. This one is for clothes, and I like the clothes but not the price tag. Still, I think, well, I’ll just go have a glass of wine and maybe they’ll have a scarf that will fit me not matter what size I am and won’t cost too much. Ha.

The party is held at the consultant’s home, and after much food (which is obviously not helping the situation) and a bit of wine (which isn’t helping either but is at least mellowing me out), I decide to try on a couple of blouses that will probably fit me now and in my eventual thin state. I go into a spare bedroom to try them on.

The consultant calls after me, While you’re in there, see if there’s anything you like in the closet. That’s my sample closet; everything is 75% off.

I like a lot of things in the closet, and better yet, much of it is in my size – my size which suddenly doesn’t seem so bad when one of the other guests is trying on the same blouses and I find myself thinking, that looks nice on her.

I look nice too. I put on one blouse and several ladies say, Yes! all at once. It’s so you! they tell me.

It’s beautiful, and it’s $20.

I leave the party with a huge pile of clothes, including a silvery party skirt with a stretchy waist that won’t care what size I am, ever.

The next night, I take The Child shoe shopping at the discount shoe outlet. She’s been looking like a modern day Little Match Girl lately, wearing a pair of hole-ridden boots that are held together by duct tape. She find a pair of Duck boots that she adores (“Duct-Tape Boots – Duck Boots, get it?”), and I find a pair of party shoes on the sale rail. And a pair of boots, also on clearance. I can afford them at these prices, and both will go much better with my silvery party skirt than my muddy dog-walking boots.

I chat happily with the sales clerk, who asks if I’d like to sign up for their frequent buyer card, which is something I don’t usually agree to, but I’m in such a good mood, I say, Sure, why not?

The clerk signs me up and rings me up, and then says, You’ll get a coupon in the mail for being a new member, but I’m taking the $10 off your purchase tonight.

Just because, she tells me.

When I get home, I toss the scale onto the pile of stuff that is headed to The Departed’s new residence. He didn’t ask for it back, but like everything else on that pile, I won’t be needing it anymore.

Categories // All By Myself Tags // single

My Mom and My Divorce: The Ties That Chafe

12.03.2012 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

I re-read The Foreigner’s email tirade and contemplate his reference to my second divorce.

How he says it isn’t really important, I’m immune to his tirades, for the most part. The fact that he knows at all is what strikes me. There isn’t any normal way for him to know, you see.

The Child doesn’t speak to him. He doesn’t know any of my friends, and even if he did, the funny fact is, even some of them aren’t aware of it. It’s not like I announced it in my annual Christmas letter; I don’t send one. He’s not on Facebook, doesn’t follow me on Twitter, and although he knows about my book review blog, there has been no mention of my personal situation on it. My Father certainly doesn’t speak to him.

My mother, on the other hand, does – quite often, in fact.

When The Foreigner and I divorced, it went like this: I was a stay-at-home mother to The Child, then just a year old. The Foreigner and I lived in Oregon, where we had moved at his behest, taking me far from both my support network and my job prospects, both of which were located in New York. He simply announced one day that he wanted a divorce and, as a result, would be returning to The Netherlands, to be closer to his family.

I could have pointed out that The Child he was moving half a planet away from was also his family, but that was not really the point; the point is, I was really in a spot, thousands of miles from anyone who could help me or any visible means of helping myself. I did what people normally do in this type of crisis: I called my mother.

She let out a deep sigh filled with her aggravation and disappointment in me, and told me, “Well, I guess you can come home, then.”

The next day, I looked over The Foreigner’s shoulder as he sat at his computer, and saw an email in his box from my mother. The subject line read, “Us.” I didn’t read the email, but she felt compelled to tell me at some point that just because things had not worked out between me and him, didn’t mean she should not be able to maintain her friendship with him.

So instead of going home, I moved to Seattle, where an old friend was living, one who graciously offered me a place to stay while I found a job, helped me find a daycare for my daughter, not to mention an apartment to live in, and let me cry on her shoulder and supported me in a thousand different ways that I don’t really remember but will forever be grateful for.

About two years later, when I was living in a small rented townhouse, The Foreigner announced he was modifying the child support agreement. The amount he had to pay – although significantly less than what the state formula called for – was too much, he said. So he had decided what he preferred to pay. You get what you get, he said. On one of these reduced payment checks, he deducted the cost of some candy he’d sent The Child, and called me an “Ungrateful Woman” in his explanation of the amount on the memo line.

I decided not to argue the point, and filed a request with the state agency that collects child support. On his next visit to the United States, the agency arranged to serve him with collection papers, which was made rather difficult in light of the fact that his new girlfriend (now his wife, and mother of the two children he claims he cannot feed) lied to the process server to prevent this from happening. Though people like to complain about the inefficiency of government agencies, I will never forget how impressed I was when after a week of chasing The Foreigner and The One Who Came After Me around, they finally managed to serve him just as he was about to board the plane to fly home, with all the other passengers as witnesses.

I received an indignant email from my mother not long after. I was a deplorable person for “belittling and humiliating him” in this way, when, after all, he was “trying” to pay.

I wanted to tell her that if I told CPS I was “trying” to feed the child or “trying” to find her decent child care or “trying” to provide medical care and a roof over her head, but not actually doing it, nobody would say they were being anything other than responsible in taking the actions they would most certainly take in such a situation.

But instead I just deleted the email, and all the other ones that followed. There’s a pattern to them: First a berating, then a friendly email that pretends the berating never happened. If no response, then indignance over my lack of manners.  And so on.

I only see her now on the rare occasions I am in her geographical area for other reasons, but mostly I ignore her, keep my distance. I read all her emails, and reply to some but not others, depending on the tone and my mood. I send birthday cards and Christmas gifts without fail, but I put little thought and no feeling into it, and expect nothing in return. I mostly send them to remind myself that one of us, at least, is willing to do the right thing, the normal thing, in spite of everything else.

So in the midst of my divorce, it was no coincidence that The Foreigner suddenly needed an accounting of his child care payments at the worst possible moment. He knows everything that is going on, and although that isn’t much because I don’t tell my mother much, it’s still just enough to be troublesome.

While this exchange about medical bills is going on, I receive a nasty email from my mother, chiding me for The Child’s lack of manners in failing to send a thank you note for a birthday gift several months before. I delete it. A few weeks later, I receive two more emails, asking me “how things are going” and inquiring about some books she thought I might like. I ignore those, too.

I’ve had many thoughts over the years since my first marriage about my mother; some made me sad, others made me rage. Now I feel nothing, and worse, I don’t even have feelings about that.

Categories // All By Myself, The Divorce Tags // narcissism, reflections, single parenting, The Foreigner

Hot Chocolate on Blue Wednesday

11.23.2012 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

The Child is on a mission: she needs money.

In the summer, she sells sno-cones on the street behind our house. She does quite well with this, raking in sixteen dollars on one particularly hot day last summer; she sold sno-cones to the mailman, a grandma with a car full of grandkids, and a local Got Junk franchisee. A picture of The Child, her sno-cone stand, and the truck’s driver ended up on the Got Junk Facebook page that day. She was both rich and famous.

Sno-cones in November, though, are not a good business model, even when you live on a busy street. The Child develops a new plan: Hot chocolate. She spends days working on a sign, nagging me to buy her a supply of mix and hot beverage cups, and badgering me into buying her a little table for her business. She needs something to keep the cocoa hot, and receives my old slow cooker from the yard sale pile in the garage.

She’s ready.

The day before Thanksgiving, she hauls everything out to the corner, and eagerly jumps up and down in the icy drizzle with her sign advertising hot chocolate.

An hour later, she comes back inside, despondent.

Nobody wants to buy hot chocolate, she says.

Don’t worry about it, I tell her. Try again on Friday.

She frowns. This will not do.

I need a way to earn money, she says. What if nobody wants my hot chocolate on Friday, too?

Well, then you’ll have to find a new business plan. Keep trying until you find something that works.

She doesn’t like this idea. I need money sooner than that, she says.

A bell goes off in my head, and an angel gets its wings: Christmas is coming.

I get on the phone with my father, mostly to tell him this story because I think it’s cute. She doesn’t understand, I say, parents don’t want anything that costs money. We like the stuff they make.

That’s not true, he says. We like expensive things. Me, for example, I like expensive woodworking tools. Take note.

I have a garage full of expensive tools, I say. I’ll send them to you.

Those tools are crap, he says. The Departed bought lots of tools for his shop, none of them worth owning, according to my father.

That may be, I say, but they cost me a fortune and I want them out of my garage. Anyway, you said expensive, not good quality.

Noted, he says. Put The Child on the phone.

I get The Child and make myself scarce, as instructed.

Later, I ask her if there is anything I need to know or help with.

You need to take me to the mall on Sunday. Early, before it’s crowded, she says. Also, if an envelope full of money should maybe happen to  come in the mail, it’s not for you.

Got it.

Categories // All By Myself Tags // holidays, single parenting

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