The year was 2007. The day was March 17. The party started at our 650 square foot studio apartment in Murray Hill. After a few hours of the kind of morning drinking only appropriate on St. Patrick's Day, we moved to our neighborhood pub, Third and Long. UnPlain led a parade of revelers into the bar, probably playing "air" bagpipes and in the middle of the crowd spotted the most adorable, cuddly, snuggly, six-month old baby. Yes, six-month old baby. Wah?
True story. I put down my imaginary bagpipe and marched directly up to the drop dead gorgeous twenty-something mother of the drop dead gorgeous zero-something baby, held out my arms and yelled, "Can I hold him?!" I surmise it must've sounded more like "BlahBlahSLUR-BOLD-EM" considering how many mimosas I'd had that day. To my surprise, the mother-of-the-year candidate in front of me handed over Little Mr. Adorable almost instantly. I S-H-I-T you not and have a large number of eye witnesses who can validate this story. Not only did she hand him over, I carried this baby on my hip, with a drink in the other hand for a good 10 - 15 minutes, dancing, laughing and playing peek-a-beer. It was only when she whipped out her supermodel perfect boob in the middle of a crowded pub, on St. Patrick's Day to breastfeed him that I handed him back over. Behind me, T and all the others tried to pick their jaws up off the floor.
At 27 years old, with the ring not quite on my finger yet, I passingly judged this woman who appeared to be close in age to me. For days my friends and I remarked about the fact that this new(ish) mother had her baby in a crowded bar, handed over her baby to someone who had clearly imbibed a few cocktails and then proceeded to breastfeed her baby after probably having a a few cocktails herself. We judged, we made jokes, we expressed disbelief.
What I did not feel at the time, was the heart heaviness that I feel now when I think back to that experience. As the mother of a precious little man who rules my world in the most wonderful way, it physically pains me to remember the disregard with which this woman treated that tiny someone who completely depended on her for the most basic of needs. Perhaps this sounds a bit dramatic (have you met me?), but it hits me in a way now that it didn't back then.
Then yesterday, when a friend posted on Facebook this debate, "Are Modern Parents Self-Absorbed" from nytimes.com it brought me back to St. Patricks Day 2007 and got me thinking about UnPlain, T and Baby P in 2012. When you have a baby, does your life stop? Do you give up the pre-baby activities you considered fun? Or, do you bring baby along for the ride? For me, I think we meet somewhere in the middle. Life does not stop, it changes. Fun is still to be had, timing is simply trickier (and more expensive). And baby comes along for the ride sometimes, when it's appropriate.
P has come along with T and I to a day time wine tasting event, but Momma UnPlain didn't get to taste all that much. Does P come out to dinner with us? Absolutely, but we go early, we order fast and if P's not cooperating we get our food to go. I believe it's my job (and my pleasure) to behave responsibly. I do what's best for my child and do my best to be considerate of others. On the other hand, it's unfair of you express your annoyance just because I have a stroller or because my baby is still learning to control the volume of his hearty, wonderful laugh. Do you also think that my 90 year old grandparent in a wheelchair who yells because he can't hear should be kept out of your favorite dining establishment as well? I'm sorry, is Grandpa ruining your meal?
The bottom line is you're not going to see my baby at a club or lounge and you're not going to see my baby watching your favorite band at your favorite bar at 9pm. You probably won't see me either because I'm tired and I'll be in bed. However, you may see my baby at that family friendly biergarten on a crisp fall afternoon and we, the entire family UnPlain, have every right to be there whether you like it or not.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Monday, August 27, 2012
(Play)Dating

Three and a half years later I find myself "dating" again. This time, I'm Play Dating.As in, "hey, your kid is the same age as my kid, why not get them together and hope we like each other at least a little." It sounds simple, but anyone who knows women knows that we mate for life. Our friends mean the world to us. We talk on the phone. When we hang up the phone, we text each other. After we text each other we post on each other's Facebook walls. Then before our husband, boyfriend or roomate can roll his eyes and say, "haven't you had enough?" we tell him about the hilarious thing that our best friend just told / texted / facebooked us. And not to let the cat out of the bag, but those same husbands, boyfriends or roomates would be none-to-pleased to learn that we share, in excruciating detail, pretty much everything with those girlfriends in our inner circle.
My personal core group of girlfriends, aka: my besties, consists of two single ladies who I categorize by danger levels similar to the terrorist threat color system, one not-so-single lady for whom I look forward to one day playing Maid of Honor for, and one really not-so-single lady who just popped out her second child in two years. All of these girls know me for who I am including the good, the bad, the ugly and the beautiful. None of these girls live within 45 minutes of me.
What I learned shortly after 27 hours of labor, 3.5 hours of pushing and three months of colic is that moms need other moms and we need them close by. Moms need other moms who can drop what they're doing and drag their yoga-pants-wearing asses across the street for a quick sanity check, coffee break, or to answer the question, "how the hell did you get your baby to stop chewing the side of his crib?" Bring on the play dates!
P, like most one-year-olds isn't particularly choosey about who he plays with. If you touch his toy, he will hit you. If you touch your toy that he's playing with, he will hit you. If you do none of the above, he probably won't hit you. That leaves the rest up to me. Luckily I had met a great group of ladies in the prenatal yoga class I attended religiously leading up to P's birth. Our babies are all around the same age, our sciatic nerves are back in tact and almost too-easily, our parenting style is on the same wavelength. After giving up a three to four hour daily commute, I was finally able to actually hang out with them. How fortunate was I to learn that we also share other things in common, like the belief that it's acceptable to have a beer with lunch, a little Baby Einstein never killed anyone, and organic chicken nuggets are a godsend.
I thought to myself, "who knew it'd be this easy to meet awesome people with kids the same age so close to home?" They must be all over right? So I hit the baby-circuit hard, branched out and quickly learned that I was WRONG. Not all other mom's out there think like me. I've met tiger moms, helicopter moms and know-it-all moms who prefer to preach rather than a give and take of advice. Had I just simply been so lucky as to find a group of like-minded, fun-as-hell mommas on the first shot, before P was even born? Um, holy crap, I had.
I'm not sure whom I'm more grateful to. P for giving me the opportunity to meet such cool people right here in my neighborhood or these ladies for their hoards of GOOD advice, hilarious stories and willingness to turn circle time into happy hour at the drop of a hat. Either way, I consider myself incredibly lucky and am thrilled to be reaping just another benefit of giving up corporate america for paci's, poopies and the responsibility of teaching my son that while it's OK for right now, he's going to eventually have to learn to let go of his penis. Good thing I have a small army of new friends to help me out with that one.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Working Girl

Deadlines, conference calls and phrases like "circle back," "ping me", and "the net-net" are a thing of the past. Or they were supposed to be, but the truth is this: I. Like. Money. I think most of us do. UnPlain has a penchant for shopping, enjoys a good car service pick up, and likes to buy good wine (or large quantities of decent wine). The simple life has never been for me and while I'm proud to report that I am one-sixth into my personal goal of not purchasing a single item of clothing for six months and, I wouldn't balk at the opportunity to purchase a new bag, pair of shoes, or even a bra for that matter.
Additionally, I think most moms out there would agree that werking it with a toddler ain't that easy. Recently, on a particularly inspired day I channeled my best Betty Draper and threw on a pair of high-waisted, side-zip cigarette pants with a lovely white collared shirt. I accessorized myself perfectly, threw a diaper and wipes into my handbag and headed off for my day of visits with P. Hours later, back at home I sat on my kitchen floor in my chicer-than-though mommy gear with sweat-stained pits and yogurt all over my once pristinely pressed pants.
Not only is werking it with a toddler not easy, it doesn't pay the bills, so when approached by a former employer to take on a two-and-a-half month freelance project, I jumped at the opportunity to earn some dough and use my creativity for something that doesn't involve crayons. Before I could say "conference call" I found myself ignoring P to create a spreadsheet, hiring a nanny and dialing into a daily team meeting. Before I could say "conference call" I found myself fighting off the pangs of guilt and sadness that come with missing precious moments with P.
Today marks one week since I've been fortunate enough to land a two-and-a-half month gig, working from home, doing something I really enjoy. While what I'm doing is fun, challenging and allows me to have big girl conversations it somehow pales in comparison to the satisfaction I feel after a day of playdates, errands and cooking. I've spent years working crazy hours, giving 1000%, traveling around the country and taking extraordinary pride in my achievements as an event producer. Now, 10 years since beginning my career, I can honestly say my favorite to answer the question, "What do you do?" is "I'm a stay-at-hom-mom."
In the meantime, going back to guilt and back to the grind for two-and-a-half months, is a fabulous reminder that I can work it and werk it. For a short time anyway....
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)