I Can Barely Take Care of Myself Jen Kirkman (best books for students to read txt) đ
- Author: Jen Kirkman
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I know that nothing you love comes easy. Thereâs crying, flatulence, and wetness with anything thatâs ultimately worthwhile. Thatâs how Eileen feels about raising baby Henry and how I feel about spending all of my time working on my career. I wish I could spend less time on it, but I donât make the rules about how much dedication it takes just to get a morsel of success in show business and stand-up comedy. Just like Eileen doesnât make the rules about how much dedication it takes to keep baby Henry alive and happy. Eileen chose motherhood. I didnât. And to me, thatâs where the conversation ends. That and when someone starts making toot noises out of her butt while Iâm trying to eat a cupcake.
Even though Iâm the one making this argument, I resent having to refer to my career as my baby in order to explain myself to parents. It suggests that as long as a woman has something she feels maternal toward, then she passes as a regular human being. She wants to swaddle her career, so weâll make an exception and give her a pass!
Women donât have to have maternal urges to be women. My career is not my surrogate baby just like my car is not my surrogate sex slave just because I turn it on and ride it. Men donât call their careers their sons or daughters. A fireman without kids doesnât have to pretend that his job is his baby replacement. Oh, yeah, when I walk up those forty flights of stairs fighting back the burning and falling asbestos, I just cradle the hose in my arms and think, This is my baby.
Itâs a weird thing society puts on us women. They tell us that we can have careers (well, after they told us we could voteâthey sort of said it would be okay if we wanted to have a career, as long as we agree to get paid less than a man for the same job), and then they tell us that we arenât real women if we have careers but no babies, and if we dare pick a career over a baby . . . we better at least talk about that career like itâs a baby in order to blend in and not call attention to the fact that weâre selfish women who are not carrying on the human race.
I donât actually feel maternal about my career, although there are similarities to motherhood. Sometimes my career has me out of bed at five in the morning and it doesnât give a shit how much sleep Iâve had the night before. I have to constantly come up with new things to âplay withâ or my career gets bored. Youâll never see me breast-feeding my desk or taking its temperature rectally, although I am steadfast about wiping it down every day with antibacterial wipes. (Donât worry. I use the environmentally friendly, chemical-free wipes. I want to make a nice planet for other desks to grow up in.) But unlike with motherhood, I donât feed my career. My career feeds me, and I canât ignore my career because if I do, someone younger and funnier will give it the attention it needs and then sheâll get her own sitcom.
I WENT ON a business trip one weekend and the guy who drove the shuttle from the carport to the airport said, âWhere you headed?â
âNew York City,â I told him.
He got all bright-eyed. âNew York City. Iâve always wanted to go there. But I only know about it from Sex and the City repeats.â
I was delighted. I realized that my subtle streaks of racism had prevented me from ever assuming Iâd get to talk about one of my favorite TV shows with a straight, middle-age black guy.
âCan I ask you a question, Ms. New York? Now, let me guess, are you a Carrie, a Samantha, a Charlotte, or a Miranda? Let me see . . .â He took a look at the motorcycle boots I was wearing and said, âDamn, girl, according to those shoes, you ainât any one of those ladies.â
I explained to him that itâs not comfortable to wear Manolo Blahniks on a red-eye flight and that itâs not financially comfortable in general for me to wear shoes that cost a thousand dollars.
âSo youâll get to town and see your girlfriends and have some drinks, like a cosmo or even a lemon drop? Thatâs a new one Iâve heard of,â he said.
âWell, I land at five forty-five a.m. at JFK, so Iâll probably just try to find a yellow cab and avoid those guys with the duct tape on their 1988 BMWs who call themselves âindependently owned car services.â But then yes, I will probably see my friends that night. I havenât given any thought yet as to what type of drinks weâll have.â
I was having fun with my driver, who looked like a world-weary older black guy but had the soul of a 1980s teenage club kid heading to the Limelight. That is, until he said, âYour husband and kids okay with you taking off for this girlsâ weekend?â
âWell, actually itâs not a girlsâ weekend. I have a business meeting. Anyway, Iâm not married and I donât have kids.â
âGirl! What you waiting for! Youâre attractive! You can find a man!â
Iâm not sure why this myth exists that only attractive people get married. Have you ever googled âCracker Barrel weddingsâ? I told him that I had once had a husband, that that husband and I did not work out, and that Iâm very happy because I get
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